Justin Trudeau — Marvel’s latest superhero

The cover of US publisher Marvel's comic book, featuring Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a super hero in front of a newstand in Montreal, Canada on August 31, 2016.  Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau takes the role of a superhero in a comic book by US publisher Marvel released on newsstands August 31 in Canada. Trudeau appears smiling in a corner of a boxing ring on the cover of the comic book, a limited edition in English of the series "Civil War II: Choosing Sides" wearing a maple leaf shirt.  / AFP PHOTO / Marc BRAIBANT / TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY MARC BRAIBANT

The cover of US publisher Marvel’s comic book, featuring Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a super hero in front of a newstand in Montreal, Canada on August 31, 2016. Trudeau appears smiling in a corner of a boxing ring on the cover of the comic book, a limited edition in English of the series ‘Civil War II: Choosing Sides’ wearing a maple leaf shirt. AFP PHOTO

MONTREAL, Canada — He snowboards, he hikes, he surfs — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is already a bit of an action hero.

But now, Marvel has made him into a real superhero, in a comic book that hit newsstands Wednesday.

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Trudeau graces one of two covers of the latest edition of “Civil War II: Choosing Sides” — seated in the corner of a boxing ring, smiling, his elbows resting on the ropes, with the maple leaf symbol emblazoned on his tank top and wearing red boxing gloves.

The 44-year-old prime minister is surrounded by Canadian superheroes Puck, Sasquatch and Aurora — members of the Alpha Flight squad — as Iron Man looms in the background.

The main cover in circulation does not feature Trudeau.

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The comic book also introduces a mysterious new character, Ulysses, who has the power to predict the future.

Trudeau is consulted in his Ottawa office by the members of Alpha Flight after a disagreement breaks out over how to leverage Ulysses’s powers.

Captain Marvel wants to take measures to prevent crimes before they occur, while Tony Stark (Iron Man) views it as immoral to punish anyone for a crime they have not yet committed.

Trudeau takes a principled view, telling his comrades: “Above all else civil liberties must be protected.

“I think imprisoning people for crimes they may not even have thought of yet is wrong… I think this is a dangerous path you’ve embarked on.”

Trudeau’s father Pierre, who also served as Canada’s prime minister, also appeared in a Marvel comic released in 1979.

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