His apology is sufficient for his actions, but should he do it again then his position should be considered by his own party, it is not acceptable practice and you downplaying it is irrelevant to that.
There would be no reaction if he had not broken Parliamentary protocol in the first place, so stop trying to fudge the issue - Trudeau was in the wrong, Trudeau apologised for that.
Honestly wouldn't be surprised if she was told to make a big deal about it and that she really didn't care much.
I'm trying to understand... in government when a vote comes up you have 3 options... yea, nay, or no vote. You typically need a specific number of Yea's to pass. On controversial bills, law makers who oppose something, will typically take a "no vote" at the expectation that it makes them look better than voting "nay". Whether the guy chooses to vote "nay", or chooses to use the standard normal canadian process for a "no vote", does it really matter? He's clearly not intending to vote "yea". So, really all Trudeaux is doing is showing his frustration at a vote he wants that is not going to pass, and wanting to force these people to put in the "nay" vote. Is that right? Or was this guy trying to vote "yea" but couldn't get over there? It seems from what I've read (yesterday) that the guy will not vote "yea" either way.
So much pho-outrage over a non-event. I've seen more violence at a baby shower full of pregnant women, and that ended in laughs.
"Well shit, ya'll have fun now"
At least Trudeau knows for next time to just drop kick everyone in the way since it has the same result.
Anyone calling this an assault is demeaning real assault victims in the world. For the 'victim' and the opposition to use this as an example of violence against women is an absolute disgrace. This was an accidental brush. I work in restaurants and can't count the number of times in the kitchen I've turned around and caught a female employee in the chest with an arm, elbow, hand, etc. accidentally. To insinuate that could be assault is utterly ridiculous. Then to top this off, they spend a day in parliament on tax payer dollars yesterday 'debating' the whole incident. From what I saw there were a bunch of adults acting like children. I'm not a liberal, but I actually support Trudeau's behaviour. If you're going to behave like a four year old, don't be upset when you're treated like one.
The debates about the elbow incident in the commons had very little to do with the incident itself, but was the opposition using their parliamentary rights to basically filibuster the assisted dying bill out of contempt for the Liberal's motion to limit debate on the bill and trying to control Parliamentary procedure now and for the future. They did exactly what they're supposed to do.
This what happens when you elect someone who thinks with their feels
It's in opposition to the limitation of debate and the "Motion #6" for that day that was trying to decimate the debate time normally allotted and frankly needed for this quite controversial bill. Limiting debate mostly due to the fact that the Liberal party dragged their heels bringing the bill to the floor in the first place. They didn't even have a quorum on Monday when it should have begun. Ridiculous. And now they're up against the gun to get a working bill passed prior to June 6th to satisfy the Supreme Court decision on assisted dying, and it still has to get through the commons and then the senate.
There's a lot more to it than just some fracas. But it's certainly not just a matter of people getting butthurt and exacerbating some wimpy elbow heh. This isn't unusual for Parliament, especially when the majority tries to circumvent Parliamentary procedures to suit their needs, which is definitely a matter of "fuck democracy."
They really should have tabled the assisted dying bill sooner considering theres a deadline on a court decision coming up.