Justin Trudeau targets billionaires, tech moguls at secretive Sun Valley conference
Annual gathering in Idaho attracts some of the world's richest business leaders
Justin Trudeau is spending Wednesday trying to sell Canada as a great place to do business for some of the world's biggest technology and media moguls.
The prime minister is in Sun Valley, Idaho, at an annual conference for the global business elite.
Details about the gathering, hosted by the American investment firm Allen & Company, are typically kept secret, but insiders have described the event as "summer camp for billionaires."
Cameron Ahmed, a spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office, said Trudeau "is attending the conference with the goal of attracting investment to Canada."
But not much else is known about what is on Trudeau's agenda.
The trip was announced by the PMO with less than 24 hours' notice and the conference is closed to the media.
Trudeau to meet with investors
A senior government source told The Canadian Press that Trudeau went for the same reason he went to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and to New York.
The source said Trudeau was invited to speak to the largest investors in the world, whom he is trying to convince to spend some of their money in Canada.
The guest list is confidential, but reports suggest Microsoft founder Bill Gates will be there, along with business magnate Warren Buffet, Facebook chairman and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg, and Amazon's Jeff Bezos.
2nd Canadian PM to attend Sun Valley
Trudeau is not the first Canadian prime minister to attend this event.
In 2004, Paul Martin flew to Idaho shortly after the Liberals won a minority government.
"I won't talk to you about who was there," the former prime minister told CBC News, adding that "it's a very informal thing, but quite clearly, the discussion was very acute and on the point."
When Martin attended the conference he pitched Canada's softwood lumber industry to the world's economic elite.
Asked if he had any insight into what Trudeau might be pushing Wednesday, Martin didn't have any specifics.
"I'm sure that [Trudeau] is going to be the centre of the debate, and deal with the issues he thinks are important, so he will respond to the issues that his audience thinks are important."
Martin said he has confidence in Trudeau's ability to sell Canada to this niche audience.
"He will do very, very well. I've seen him on occasions such as this, and he handles himself with great skill … he'll look upon this audience as one that effectively can carry that message beyond the conference, and he'll do it very well."
'Betraying' the middle class
The Conservative Party says taxpayer dollars should be spent elsewhere.
In a release from the Office of the Official Opposition, the party criticizes Trudeau, saying "while the Liberal government cancelled tax credits for parents who enrol their kids in sports and arts activities, there is apparently enough taxpayer money to send Justin Trudeau to summer camp for billionaires."
After several requests, no Conservative MPs were available for an interview.
With files from The Canadian Press