Thủ tướng Canada Justin Trudeau: Nhà lãnh đạo sành điệu nhất thế giới
17.02.2017 07:54
Ăn mặc sành điệu không dễ và khi bạn là nhà lãnh đạo của một quốc gia càng khó. Trong mắt mọi người, chính khách phải là người ăn mặc nền nã, chỉn chu; bộ suit màu tối là tất cả.Để “chặt chém” đối tác, thủ tướng Canada không can thiệp vào áo quần – những thứ bất khả kháng, mà tập trung vào 2 thứ nhỏ song cực kỳ quan trọng – có thể thay đổi: cavat và tất.
Vì luôn mặc suit màu tối và pastel, nên nhà chính khách 44 tuổi này thường dùng cavat màu nổi như: đỏ, xanh lá cây, tím…và nhiều nhất chắc chắn là đỏ. Bộ sưu tập cavat màu đỏ của ông có chấm bi, sọc nổi, sọc chìm, trơn, hoa văn chìm….Có lẽ, ông là nhà lãnh đạo lớn thích chơi màu sắc nhất.
Ngoài cavat nổi bần bật, thêm một thứ nữa để có thể định Justin Trudeau: tất có màu sắc và họa tiết tươi vui. Đó có thể là hình lá phong - biểu tượng của Canada, kẻ ca rô, thậm chí cả họa tiết đầu lâu xương chéo….
Bên cạnh đó, trang phục đời thường của vị thủ tướng này cũng rất đáng cho chúng ta học hỏi. Combo chuẩn không cần chỉnh của ông: sơ mi + quần jeans + giày oxford + thắt lưng da to bản, thỉnh thoảng cộng thêm áo vest kiểu dáng đơn giản ở các sự kiện không quá trang trọng.
Ngoài ra, tùy hoàn cảnh và đất nước, thủ tướng Canada có thể mặc theo đúng hoàn cảnh hoặc văn hóa.
Con gái Tổng thống Trump 'đắm đuối' nhìn Thủ tướng Canada điển trai
Ngoại hình đẹp trai của Thủ tướng Canada Justin Trudeau đã thu hút ánh nhìn "đắm đuối" của Ivanka Trump, ái nữ của Tổng thống Mỹ Donald Trump.
Đến lượt bà Merkel Đến Đến lượt bà Merkel bị tướng Canada "hớp hồn"
(NLĐO) – Ánh nhìn và nụ cười đầy trìu mến của Thủ tướng Đức Angela Merkel dành cho người đồng cấp Canada Justin Trudeau hôm 18-2 tiếp tục trở thành đề tài nóng của cư dân mạng.
Trước đó, loạt ảnh đệ nhất tiểu thư Ivanka Trump, công nương Kate Middleton và diễn viên Emme Watson như bị hớp hồn bởi vẻ điển trai của Thủ tướng Trudeau đã được chia sẻ rộng rãi trên mạng xã hội.
Hôm 18-2, bức ảnh Thủ tướng Đức Merkel trìu mến tiếp đón vị thủ tướng điển trai của Canada lại một lần nữa trở thành tâm điểm của người dùng mạng.
Ánh nhìn của Ivanka Trump dành cho Thủ tướng Canada Trudeau đã trở thành đề tài bàn tán của cư dân mạng những ngày qua. Ảnh: AP
Công nương Kate trong cuộc gặp gỡ với lãnh đạo Canada điển trai. Ảnh: Daily Mail
Thủ tướng Trudeau hiện đang thực hiện chuyến viếng thăm cấp nhà nước 2 ngày đến Đức. Nhà lãnh đạo điển trai này được bà Merkel chào đón bên ngoài Văn phòng chính phủ Đức ở thủ đô Berlin vào sáng 18-2. Tối trước đó, lãnh đạo 2 nước đã gặp gỡ và dùng bữa tối cùng nhau tại khách sạn Regent, thủ đô Berlin.
Ánh nhìn và nụ cười trìu mến của Thủ tướng Đức Angela Merkel dành cho người đồng cấp Đức hôm 18-2 tiếp tục gây bão mạng. Ảnh: EPA
Tối 17-2, ông Trudeau đã gặp gỡ và dùng bữa tối với bà Merkel. Ảnh: Reuters.
Trước đó, vào hôm 17-2, Thủ tướng Trudeau đã ca ngợi thỏa thuận thương mại tự do của Canada với khối Liên minh châu Âu (EU) vừa được phê chuẩn, nói với Nghị viện châu Âu rằng thỏa thuận này sẽ tạo việc làm và cải thiện đời sống của người dân.
Một người dùng mạng hài hước khẳng định không ai có thể thoát khỏi sức hút của ông Trudeau. Ảnh: Daily Mail
Cao Lực (Theo Daily Mail
Thủ tướng Canada nắm thế chủ động khi bắt tay với Trump
(Công lý) - Thủ tướng Canada Justin Trudeau được cho là đã thể hiện được thế chủ động chứ không bị lấn át bởi thói quen bắt tay mạnh mẽ của Tổng thống Mỹ Trump.
Tuần trước, Tổng thống Mỹ Donald Trump đã gây chú ý bởi cái bắt tay kỳ lạ kéo dài 19 giây với Thủ tướng Nhật Bản Shinzo Abe. Vì vậy, khi Thủ tướng Canada Justin Trudeau trở thành lãnh đạo thế giới thứ ba đến thăm Nhà Trắng vào ngày 13/2, thì tất cả ánh mắt đều đổ dồn vào khoảnh khắc hai ông bắt tay.
Thủ tướng Canada nắm được thế chủ động khi bắt tay với Trump
Theo đó, sau khi ra khỏi đoàn xe hộ tống ông Trudeau ngay lập tức bắt tay ông Trump. Mark Bowden, chuyên gia về ngôn ngữ cơ thể nhận xét, ông Trudeau đã giữ được thế chủ động khi bắt tay với ông Trump. Và cái bắt tay này chỉ kéo dài 6 giây.
Bowden cho biết, ông Trudeau và ông Trump đứng rất gần nhau nên ông Trump không thể giật tay để kéo và khiến ông Trudeau mất thăng bằng - cử chỉ Trump thường làm để khẳng định mình là người lấn át đối phương.
Được biết, ông Trump đã đặt tay lên vai của ông Trudeau, một cách thể hiện sự lấn át. Nhưng đáp lại, Trudeau cũng đặt tay lên cánh tay của Trump. Theo một số người tìm hiểu về ngôn ngữ cơ thể, ông Trudeau đã cố tình "cắt đứt đòn bẩy của Trump" để ngăn chặn bất kỳ hành động thể hiện sự "trên cơ" nào.
Trước cái bắt tay của hai người, nhiều người dùng mạng tỏ ra rất thích thú. Một người dùng Twitter viết, "Hãy nhìn vào những trận chiến diễn ra trong cái bắt tay đó, ông Trudeau đã chống lại thế kẹp và giật tay của Trump". Một người khác viết, "Trudeau chống cự lại kiểu bắt tay kỳ lạ của Trump là cách thể hiện ưu thế rõ nhất trong lịch sử của Canada".
Khoảnh khắc thú vị của hai vị lãnh đạo trong phòng Bầu dục
Sau đó, khi ngồi tại Phòng Bầu dục, họ bắt tay một lần nữa. Điều thú vị là lần này Trump để cho Trudeau chiếm thế thượng phong. Ông Trump ngửa tay chìa về phía ông Trudeau, nhưng Thủ tướng Canada vẫn đan hai tay vào nhau, đặt trên đùi và môi hơi bĩu ra, nhìn xuống lòng bàn tay của Tổng thống Mỹ.
Nhiếp ảnh gia hãng Reuters đã nhanh tay chụp lại khoảnh khắc này và biểu cảm của ông Trudeau nhanh chóng được chia sẻ trên mạng. Một số người bình luận khuôn mặt của ông Trudeau đang diễn tả chính xác những cảm nhận hiện nay của toàn thế giới.
Tuy nhiên, trong thực tế, ông Trump là người đã gợi ý vớibáochí là muốn chụp chung một tấm ảnh bắt tay ông Trudeau. Nhưng có vẻ lúc ông Trudeau chưa kịp phản ứng với lời đề nghị bắt tay của ông Trump.
Trudeau number 1 world leader, Canada leading the free world
Canada, Leading the Free World
Justin Tang for The New York Times
OTTAWA — President Trump’s harsh travel ban reflects a global pattern: All around the world, countries are slamming the doors shut.
One great exception: Canada. It may now be the finest example of the values of the Statue of Liberty.This isn’t just because Canadian leaders are particularly enlightened, although there’s some of that.
It’s mostly because the Canadian people themselves remain astonishingly hospitable, with many groups clamoring for more Syrian refugees.
“Thank you, Canada,” Omar al-Omar, a Syrian who was shot at age 15 as the war started, said to me at a center here where refugees are getting lessons in English and in Canadian habits, such as excruciating politeness. “I’m very happy. I feel welcome.”
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Omar al-Omar, a Syrian refugee, says he is thankful for Canada’s welcome.CreditJustin Tang for The New York Times
“I’m sad Arab countries aren’t doing enough for refugees,” Omar added. “I’m really happy Canada does what others don’t.”
President Barack Obama admitted 12,000 Syrian refugees, triggering a furor and a backlash. Meanwhile, Canada, with a far smaller population, has admitted 40,000 Syrians.
Ahmed Hussen, Canada’s immigration minister, told me that one of the criticisms he faces from ordinary Canadians is that he’s not bringing in enough Syrians. And Hussen is himself an emblem of the country’s openness: He arrived at age 16 as a refugee from Somalia and now runs the ministry that once served him.
“We want people to join the Canadian family,” he said, noting that the country is trying to figure out how to keep more foreign students from leaving after graduation. And his trajectory is not unique: Two of the last three governors general arrived as refugees, one from Haiti and the other from Hong Kong. Canada also noted last year that it had more Sikhs in its cabinet than India did.
Let’s be clear: Canada has xenophobes, too, and indeed, six people were just killed at a mosque in Quebec. Its people are not intrinsically nicer or more tolerant than Europeans or Americans.
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Ahmed Hussen arrived in Canada at age 16 as a refugee from Somalia and now runs the ministry that once served him.CreditJustin Tang for The New York Times
Historically, Canada had a “white Canada” immigration policy steeped in racism and xenophobia. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, 96 percent of immigrants were from Europe, and even Pierre Trudeau, who as prime minister championed tolerance, started out his career as a racist who joined an anti-Semitic riot.
Yet over the last 50 years, Canada transformed itself — because of determined political leadership, partly by Trudeau, whose son is today prime minister and extols similar ideals. Almost one-fifth of Canadians are what people here describe as “visible minorities” — mostly ethnic Chinese or people with roots in Africa or South Asia — and Muslims constitute three times the percentage of Canadians as of Americans. By 2036, almost half of Canadians are expected to be immigrants or children of immigrants.
When I asked lily-white Canadians about their views on that, they looked puzzled and inquired, “And what’s the problem?”
Canada’s leaders nurtured multiculturalism into a sacred part of the country’s identity. As the rest of the world bangs the doors shut, Canadians celebrate their openness — and, polls show, now take more pride in multiculturalism than in hockey.
“The results in Canada have been spectacular,” noted Jonathan Tepperman in a recent book, “The Fix,” which explores government successes around the world, including Canada’s immigration policy. “They turned a small, closed, ethnically homogeneous state into a vibrant global powerhouse and one of the most open and successful multicultural nations in the world.”
It helps that Canada wasn’t beset by illegal immigration, and that economic policies limited the hollowing out of the middle class. Canada also has a brilliant system of citizen sponsorship. Five or more people can form a group to sponsor a refugee family, and even though this often involves a commitment of thousands of dollars per sponsor, there is a waiting list for getting refugees.
These volunteers integrate the newcomers into the community, and help them get jobs and education. This focus on integration is one reason Canada’s immigrants have thrived and become doctors and lawyers, almost never terrorists.
The sponsors also untangle cultural clashes, noted Jessie Thomson, a sponsor of a Syrian family, as we shared a Middle Eastern feast in the family’s new home. When Thomson helped the Syrians open a bank account, she assumed it would be a joint account in the names of the husband and wife. But the family thought it should be in the name of the father, or perhaps the grandfather. In the end, everyone’s name went on the account, and each side learned something.
I asked the foreign minister, Chrystia Freeland (herself a daughter of a Ukrainian immigrant), if the Trump travel ban would help Canada poach the best of the world’s scientists and entrepreneurs for itself. “That’s exactly right!” she responded, and she noted that she had heard from C.E.O.s that Canada was now more attractive than ever. Then she made her pitch directly, through me.
“If you’re a really smart person and you want to immigrate to a great country that will welcome you, come to Canada!” she said. “And if you’re Muslim, you’re very, very welcome here, as are people of every faith — and atheists, It's Official, Justin Trudeau Now Ranked Most Powerful Leader In The "World" Canada's time to shine! In modern times, the most powerful person in the world has always been the President of the United States. Trudeau is normally nowhere nearly that powerful, in fact he doesn't event appear on any list of the most powerful world leaders. Hell, he doesn't even rank among the top politicians in General. READ ALSO: 18 Funny Tweets By Canadians Asking Justin Trudeau To Protect Canada From Donald Trump But now that Trump has been elected, things have changed in the English world. Combine that with the Brexit in Britain and all of Sudden, Trudeau jumps up a few ranks. Trump may be President Elect, but he's not exactly beloved by all, and the truest form of power comes from having the support of the people. Think about it, Trudeau actually seems like the only responsible English leader in charge right now. And when you throw in the rest of the world leaders like Putin, you really start to realize that Justin Trudeau is the only responsible adult in charge. Jeremy Hazan·November 09, 2016
That was some party the @POTUS threw our Prime Minister. It was hard not to notice the not-so-small matter of our PM being anointed new leader of the free world by the outgoing president. Or did you miss the passing of the torch in all the media talk about the "bromance" between the two?
Maybe it's just a coincidence that hot on the heels of his red carpet affair in Washington, the first by a sitting Canadian Prime Minister in two decades, Trudeau found himself at the UN this week bucking for a seat for Canada on the Security Council. All of a sudden that commitment to up Canada's commitment against ISIS in Syria and northern Iraq is coming a little clearer into focus.
Consider, if you will, the following as surefire signs, post-Washington, that the former drama teacher Trudeau may just be preparing for his new role as leader of the free world.
1. Who else if not JT? Yes, our PM would seem an unlikely protégé to take over the weighty business of saving the planet from itself. But who else among the world's dominant economies if not Trudeau? The UK is lost in navel-gazing over its place in the European UNI0N. Arguably, the Brits lost all international credibility when Blair hitched his wagon to Bush in that moral crusade against Islam to find non-existent weapons of mass destruction. And Germany, bless its open arms policy on refugees, has never been that interested in setting the agenda for the rest of the planet. Maybe it has something to do with an inferiority complex from that Nazi business all those years ago. Indeed, the country finds itself consumed by a right-wing resurgence. Barring the election of Hillary Clinton to the White House, and even with the former Secretary as president (she has a lot of baggage), Trudeau is pretty much it when it comes to a progressive voice on international affairs. Yup, I said it. To his critics, that may sound like rainbows and unicorns (see Saudi arms wheeling and dealing), but Canada just may be the best place on the planet to live right now. In which case, there's a lot for us to teach the rest of the world.
2. In some ways, Trudeau has been preparing for this role his whole life. Maybe ever since a U.S. president named Nixon predicted he would be prime minister one day. The press following Trudeau around on his Washington trip liked recounting that one. Trudeau is Canadian political royalty. Canada's Kennedys, declared CBS's 60 Minutes in an interview on the eve of Trudeau's visit. Trudeau obliged by quoting the former U.S. president, during his Rose Garden presser with "Barack." He has been groomed to make it his mission in life to change the world. There was that bedside chat with the old man before his death the details of which he doesn't much talk about. Just society and all that. No doubt a few lessons were also imparted on how to punch above your weight on the world stage when you live next to an elephant. PET used our proximity to the U.S. to leverage Canada's interests. Our closeness is often seen as a disadvantage. But the U.S. has much invested in their relationship with us, some $2 billion a day in trade to be precise. We're its second largest trading partner. The younger Trudeau has already displayed some of the old man’s flare and grasp of so-called "soft power." Can he enlist the U.S.’s power to help achieve Canada’s goals? The talk around Arctic exploration and development between Trudeau and Obama, was particularly noteworthy, vis a vis Russian claims to the region. on the cauldron in the Middle East, Trudeau has already made his mark, making good on his campaign promise to halt aerial bombardment against ISIS, but committing more advisors to train Kurds. Critics have been quick to pounce on that one. But foreign policy is a contact sport. Trudeau knows he can't cut and run from the effort against ISIS if he wants a seat at the table of international affairs. Besides, politically we can't afford the civilian casualties bombing from on-high will doubtless bring if there's to be any hope of rapprochement in the region.
3. Trudeau's star power is undeniable. Our culture is obsessed with celebrity. So too increasingly is our politics. There's a billionaire from New York defying the odds Stateside. And Vladimir Putin riding bareback and bare-chested like a rock star on the cover of Russia's version of Rolling Stone. Trudeau understands the power of star power and social media. Indeed, in conservative circles the PM is predictably a construct of Facebook and Twitter. Former Reform Party founder Preston Manning's take on Trudeau's Washington trip in the Globe, for example, posits that Trudeau "epitomizes the 'it’s all about me' generation." And that he was wined and dined by the U.S. president to cater to his "desire for personal attention and aggrandizement." All of it, supposedly, to "ignore conceding anything of substance on Canada-U.S. issues." Harper should have been so lucky to warrant that kind of attention from the U.S. I mean, if Presto is right, then it would seem that even the Americans have reason to fear Trudeau's people skills. But don't look now, there's Michael Bloomberg joining the chorus to praise for Trudeau and his "youthful energy and optimism [which] have inspired comparisons to John F. Kennedy." There's that name again. Maybe it was Obama who wanted to bask a little in Trudeau's glow. The PM has attracted the spotlight wherever he’s travelled. And it's been a far-reaching itinerary for a guy who was supposed to be a lightweight on matters of foreign policy. It started with the climate talks in Paris and G20 leaders gathering in Turkey shortly after his election, to the UN this week – and, oh yes, a nuclear summit in Washington at the end of the month. It's a whirlwind seemingly tailor-made for a leading role.
4. Treat it like boxing, stick and move, stick and move. U.S. media are notorious for ignoring visits from Canadian dignitaries. Not Trudeau's. The New York Times and Washington Post, the papers of record on Capitol Hill, covered the trip extensively. During the aforementioned 60 Minutes one-on-one, Trudeau explained his approached to politics being similar to his approach to boxing, one of his fave pastimes that Rocky-loving Americans can identify with. A measure of a true boxer, he said, is not how hard you can hit your opponent, it's about how hard a hit you can take and keep going. Boxing is also about not underestimating your opponent, which Trudeau has been. So before his Washington trip, the PM unleashed a bit of a jab, announcing his arrival with some PET-like cocksure advice for Americans that they pay a little more attention to the rest of the world, and maybe to their neighbour to the north as well. They are now.
5. Of pomp and circumstance. All the Washington festivities – the military honour guard, the trip to Arlington cemetery, and Trudeau's speech at the Center For American Progress – were not just the product of the obvious kinship between our PM and the U.S. president. It was a formal introduction from the most powerful man on the planet to the rest of the world. In Washington, Canadian flags flew all up and down Washington mall to announce Trudeau's arrival in a display not seen in the capitol ever, not even when Ken Taylor helped free American hostages from Iran. We'll try to ignore John Kerry's remarks about Trudeau's favorability ratings south of the border matching that of Wayne Gretzky's, cuz we all know Gretz's politics are more in line with Harper's. Yes, It's true that there is not much time left in Obama's mandate. And a Republican president in the White House come next January might change everything for the planet. Indeed, on the same night he was being feted by the White House, the Republican nominees for president were holding a debate in Miami ahead of this week's Florida primary. Is it so hard to imagine Trudeau going toe-to-toe with any of them and not holding his own? Somewhere Stephen Harper is eating his heart out.