It seems the once noble calling of statesmanship has been reduced to a punchline. Justin Trudeau, the photogenic Prime Minister of Canada, has decided that ‘boyfriend duties’ take precedence over attending a national football match. His absence was noted at the Canada versus Peru game, a moment when leaders traditionally show solidarity with their country’s sporting endeavours. Instead, he was reportedly with his partner, a choice he defended with an insouciance that would make a Victorian aristocrat blush.
Let us not mince words: this is the behaviour of a man who treats the premiership as a mere hobby, a side gig to his personal life. One is reminded of the later Roman emperors, who preferred the pleasures of the palazzo to the grim realities of governance. Trudeau’s excuse would be laughable if it were not so emblematic of a deeper rot: the infantilisation of our leaders. They no longer feel the weight of office; they feel only the demands of their own egos.
Compare this to the Victorian era, when Prime Ministers like Gladstone or Disraeli understood that their every move was a symbol of national resolve. They would have been aghast at the notion of prioritising a romantic entanglement over a public duty. Indeed, the very idea of ‘duty’ has been hollowed out. We now have leaders who ‘govern by vibes’ as the Americans say, who treat the nation as a backdrop for their personal narratives.
The mockery that has ensued on social media is deserved. World leaders, after all, are meant to be paragons of responsibility. When they behave like teenagers blow off a family dinner, they invite ridicule. But the deeper tragedy is that no one in the commentariat seems to expect anything better. We have lowered the bar so far that merely showing up is considered a triumph. Trudeau’s ‘boyfriend duties’ are just the latest symptom of a civilisation that has lost its sense of the serious.
One cannot help but think of the intellectual decadence that preceded the fall of great empires. A culture that mocks its own leaders while they mock themselves is a culture that has surrendered its future. We laugh, but it is the hollow laughter of the terminal patient. Trudeau is not an anomaly; he is the logical endpoint of a society that no longer believes in the sacredness of public office.
So let the mockery continue. But let us also take a moment to recognise that this is not simply a gaffe. It is a sign that we have given up on the idea that leadership requires sacrifice. And when that happens, the barbarians are already at the gate.








