Advertisement

Justin True-dope: PM informed of new strain of marijuana at Winnipeg town hall

Click to play video: 'PM informed of pot strain called ‘Justin Tru-dope’'
PM informed of pot strain called ‘Justin Tru-dope’
WATCH ABOVE: PM informed of pot strain called 'Justin Tru-dope' – Jan 31, 2018

Justin Trudeau held a town hall meeting in Winnipeg on Wednesday where a local pot advocate made him aware of a new strain of marijuana named after the prime minister.

Steven Stairs told the prime minister that potential pardons for those convicted of marijuana possession were going to save lives.

READ MORE: Trudeau faces questions about Russian election interference and a heckler at Winnipeg town hall

Click to play video: 'Audience member calls Trudeau a ‘liar’ at Winnipeg town hall'
Audience member calls Trudeau a ‘liar’ at Winnipeg town hall

He then asked: “Would you give pardons for people convicted of trafficking cannabis?

Story continues below advertisement

“Small-time drug dealers,” he went on to explain before moving onto his next issue.

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

“My second point is, recently a strain, that’s a type of marijuana for you people out there, that’s named after you. It’s called Justin True-dope.”

After a round of laughter from the audience, Trudeau smiled before answering.

“We are moving forth with the legalization of marijuana from a public safety and public health perspective, not from a profit-making perspective,” he said. “The system we have right now is broken.”

READ MORE: Trudeau on summer jobs funding controversy: ‘We are not rolling back the clock on women’s rights’

Click to play video: 'Trudeau says no religious group will be barred from summer jobs grant'
Trudeau says no religious group will be barred from summer jobs grant

Trudeau then went on to offer a further explanation as to why the Canadian government is legalizing marijuana, in part to get the “criminal elements out of it.”

Story continues below advertisement

Trudeau finally got around to answer Stairs’ question.

“Yes. I have said we will look after the law has changed at pardons for people who have been convicted of possession,” Trudeau explained. “But we are not at this time thinking about pardons for people who have been convicted of trafficking or pushing or dealing.”

The federal government has committed to legalizing marijuana in 2018.

Sponsored content

AdChoices