By David Ljunggren
OTTAWA, May 5 (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau, who cracked a joke in his first public remarks after a
huge wildfire in Fort McMurray, on Thursday adopted a serious
tone and promised that Ottawa would do all it could do help.
Trudeau, facing the first major natural disaster since his
Liberals took power last November, told the House of Commons
that the devastated Alberta town looked "like a war-torn corner
of the world instead of our own backyard."
Over the last few days the fire has ripped through Fort
McMurray, capital of Alberta's oil sands region, forcing the
evacuation of all 88,000 inhabitants.
Trudeau, widely known for his empathy and ability to connect
with people, seemed ill at ease on Wednesday as the scale of the
calamity became clear.
When he spoke to a meeting of Liberal legislators that day,
he began with a quip about the "Star Wars" movie franchise
before moving on to the fires.
He started off the caucus on Wednesday by saying, "It's
extremely wonderful to see everyone in such a good mood
celebrating Star Wars day today. May the fourth be with you."
"PM Trudeau makes me not want to call myself a Canadian.
'Star Wars' jokes when we just lost one of the key towns of
Alberta?" commented one irate Twitter user.
During last year's election, the then ruling Conservative
Party had portrayed the 44-year-old Trudeau as out of his depth.
Trudeau spoke to legislators on Thursday without advance
warning but spokesman Cameron Ahmad dismissed the suggestion
that the prime minister was scrambling to catch up, citing the
fast-moving nature of the crisis.
"The whole situation is pretty much last minute," he said by
telephone. Trudeau had no immediate plans to fly to the region,
seeking to avoid an unwanted distraction, he added.
Despite the increasing seriousness of the disaster, Trudeau
has largely allowed Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale to be
the government's spokesman on the federal effort.
After speaking to Parliament on Thursday, Trudeau met Alex
Trebek, the Canadian host of the game show "Jeopardy!" and later
talked to high school students. Trebek, Ahmad noted, recently
made a multimillion dollar donation to the University of Ottawa.
Trudeau is not in any immediate political danger since
opposition parties have decided for the time being not to
exploit the disaster.
After Trudeau spoke in the House of Commons he crossed the
aisle and hugged Rona Ambrose, an Albertan who is leader of the
official opposition Conservatives.
Ambrose, her voice at times near breaking, thanked him for
making the situation a priority. Trudeau and Goodale briefed her
privately on Wednesday.
University of British Columbia politics professor Richard
Johnston said Trudeau would not be harmed by how he had handled
the crisis so far.
"The coverage of Fort McMurray is so wall to wall that
almost anything else that gets said in the political realm has
been really shoved to the side ... I don't see a major misstep
here," he said in a telephone interview.
(With additional reporting by Leah Schnurr in Ottawa; Editing
by Jeffrey Benkoe)