“Of course a bilingual state is more expensive than a unilingual one — but it is a richer state.”
Remark in 1968, quoted in Improving Canada's Democracy (2006) by Terry Julian, p. 14
Joseph Philippe Pierre Yves Elliott Trudeau , usualmente conocido como Pierre Trudeau o Pierre Elliott Trudeau, fue un político canadiense, 15.º primer ministro de Canadá. Ejerció el cargo entre 1968 y 1979, fue reelegido en 1980 y en 1984 renunció a su cargo. Trudeau lideró la idea de una nación unida por un gobierno central fuerte con el francés y el inglés como lenguas oficiales. Está considerado como el refundador del Canadá moderno que asumió el federalismo, el bilingüismo y el multiculturalismo como señas de identidad.[1] Como escritor publicó su primer libro en 1956. Fue despedido en un multitudinario funeral al que asistieron personalidades de relevancia mundial. El Aeropuerto Internacional de Dorval se rebautizó con su nombre en su honor el 1 de enero de 2004.
Wikipedia
“Of course a bilingual state is more expensive than a unilingual one — but it is a richer state.”
Remark in 1968, quoted in Improving Canada's Democracy (2006) by Terry Julian, p. 14
Être votre voisin, c'est comme dormir avec un éléphant; quelque douce et placide que soit la bête, on subit chacun de ses mouvements et de ses grognements.
Addressing the Press Club in Washington, D.C. (25 March 1969) - Audio clip https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trudeau_sleeping_with_an_elephant.ogg
“I don't really know what a cyclotron is but I am certainly very happy Canada has one!”
Visiting the TRIUMF cyclotron in (February 1976), as quoted in "A Canadian TRIUMF" http://www.alumni.ubc.ca/grad_gazette/grad_gazette_june_2005.html in Grad Gazzette [University of British Columbia] (June 2005)
Part 2, 1968 - 1974 Power And Responsibility, p. 149-150
Memoirs (1993)
Part 2, 1968 - 1974 Power And Responsibility, p. 117
Memoirs (1993)
“We aimed far and high, but we did not miss the mark.”
Part 4, 1979 - 1984 "Welcome to the 1980's", p. 340
Memoirs (1993)
Responses to reporters following the kidnapping by the FLQ of a provincial cabinet minister who was eventually murdered. CBC video archives http://archives.cbc.ca/IDC-1-71-162-429-21/unforgettable_moments/conflict_war/trudeau_just_watch_me (13 October 1970)
House of Commons Debate (24 October 1969)
Part 3, 1974 - 1979 Victory And Defeat, p. 190
Memoirs (1993)
“Paddling a canoe is a source of enrichment and inner renewal.”
As quoted in "Pierre Elliott Trudeau" profile in The Greatest Canadian at CBC http://web.archive.org/web/20041029152936/http://www.cbc.ca/greatest/top_ten/nominee/trudeau-pierre-know.html
“The essential ingredient of politics is timing.”
As quoted in The Rainmaker : A Passion for Politics (1986) by Keith Davey, p. 57; also in The Wordsworth Dictionary of Quotations (1998) by Connie Robertson, p. 439
Part 4, 1979 - 1984 "Welcome to the 1980's", p. 290
Memoirs (1993)
In reply to a high school student's question about what happened to Trudeau's promises of a "Just Society", in Regina, Saskatchewan (September 1972)[citation needed]
“I'm not leaving! I must stay.”
On the reviewing stand of a St. Jean Baptiste Day parade in Montreal, after being subjected to objects being thrown by demonstrators. (24 June 1968)[citation needed]
Speech (13 December 1980), quoted in It's great up north" by Henry Porter in The Observer (20 November 2005) http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/nov/20/usa
Statement of 1970, as quoted in profile at the Canadian Museum of Civilizations http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/biography/biographi270e.shtml, also quoted in York University: The Way Must Be Tried (2008) by Michiel Horn, p. 4
Part 3, 1974 - 1979 Victory And Defeat, p. 224
Memoirs (1993)
Farewell speech to the Liberal Party http://www.primeministers.ca/trudeau/bio_9.php?context=b (14 June 1984)
Defining liberalism at the 1968 Liberal leadership convention, as quoted in "History of the Liberal Party of Canada" (PDF at the Liberal Party website) http://web.archive.org/web/20070418135603/http://www.liberal.ca/pdf/docs/070417_lpc_history_en.pdf
Speech in Paul Sauvé Arena, Montreal, Quebec, six days before the Quebec referendum on independence. (14 May 1980)
“I've been called worse things by better people.”
When it was reported to him that President Richard Nixon had called him an "asshole" (1971), quoted in Absurdities, Scandals & Stupidities in Politics (2006) by Hakeem Shittu and Callie Query, p. 19
My only response was that I had been called worse things by better people.
Trudeau's account of the comment, in Memoirs (1993) by Pierre Elliott Trudeau, p. 218
Comment referring to the 1968 student protests in Paris, patterned after the 1967 remarks of Charles de Gaulle in Montreal on Quebec independence from Canada: "Vive le Québec libre!" (Long live free Quebec!), quoted in The Lima News (11 December 1968)