Photo source: National Post
By Naveed Qazi | Editor, Globe Upfront
Justin Trudeau has won
a historic back-to-back third election in Canada. He is now in the elite
company of prime ministers. However, he had won the third term through a snap election,
by dissolution of the parliament in August 2021. An early opinion poll before
the dissolution had kept his Liberal Party ahead, but that soon changed with O’Toole’s
CPC moving ahead. Although, he had been positive about his campaign as he thought
that his management for Covid was successful.
“It looks like nobody
wanted an election and no one got what they wanted,” said the Toronto Star
political columnist Chantal Hebert as results came in, reflecting the peculiarity
of the election. When it comes to his first term, it was often tainted as scandal ridden
and shambolic.
For
the second time since 2019, Trudeau has been handed a minority government by
Canadians, meaning he will have to reach across the aisle to work with smaller
parties in order to govern. For his critics, however, this snap election
was for ‘nothing’.
During
the campaigns, he had been plagued by protestors at every stop, who made bounderish
gestures and shouted rude words, which
was not normal for him before.
His rival, O’Toole had accused
him of engineering a ‘quick power grab’ and being carefree about high deficits.
Back then in 2019, by not coming in the majority, his brow had darkened, both
literally and figuratively. But, he still managed to form the government. Eventually,
he started wearing a beard as a reflection of the gloomy new times.
Son
of former liberal prime minister Pierre Trudeau, Justin’s advocacy of a more moderate
brand of conservatism, nevertheless, seems to have gone down well with many,
even if it may puzzle some in the CPC’s traditionally hard-line support base.
For
his supporters, Trudeau had been looking too obviously good with his policies,
after six years in power. He was also getting the hang of that Chrétienesque
opportunism which can sometimes help win snap elections for weakened governments, but it can also taint by looking down at weaker opposition parties at the same time. This stance can
also backfire. The Liberal risk is that, as Gord Downie sang, “there’s nothing
uglier than a man hitting his stride.”
O’Toole’s
recent repositioning by tilting towards the centre, and shunning the far right,
had also opened up space for the populist People’s Party, campaigning on an
anti-vax, climate-change-sceptic, pro-gun, pro-oil-industry platform. Several
of its policies have been termed as xenophobic and racist. On the other hand,
Greens had failed to make any significant impact.
However, several populist activists in Canada, quite lately,
seem to have lost their nerve for normal civil conduct of Canadian politics. Rowdy disruptions of Liberal rallies by them have
become counter-productive. Part of them are vulgar mobs, who are more organised
than ever on social media. Actually, there is rise of far-right extremism in
Canada, which is putting its politics in a loophole. Canada is now a ‘home of far-right
extremism’, according to Oped writer David Moscrop, because political parties
in Canada, mainly the Conservatives have failed to repudiate extremists and
drive them out of tent. Infact, far right elements have been welcomed by the
party. For instance, in 2015, then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper fought
an election campaign in which his party floated the idea of a ‘barbaric
cultural practices’ snitch line. He then lost the contest to Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau. In 2016, one of the faces of that policy, Chris Alexander, admitted the
error as he prepared to run for the leadership of the party, but the damage was
done. In 2018, then-Conservative senator Lynn Beyak was removed from
caucus for defending residential schools, but the time it took to remove her
was telling. She has recently quit the senate. In 2019, then-leader
Andrew Scheer gave a speech to ‘extremist yellow vests’, part of
the Canadian perversion of the French populist movement on
Parliament Hill and then defended his decision to do so. Even the
recent expulsion of Derek Sloan, a Conservative member of parliament — “because
of a pattern of destructive behaviour involving multiple incidents and
disrespect towards the Conservative team for over a year,” according to O’Toole
— raises the question of why that pattern was allowed to develop in the first
place. Thus, it has become important for a pivotal party, such as CPC,
to come clear, be persistent and unambiguous on extremism lurking in its shadows.
This, at the same time, also doesn’t mean that if Canadians rebuke
the Conservatives for stirring several controversies, it makes everything which
Liberals do as right.
By
the time September came, with its frantic culture of protesters outside
hospitals, peoples wrath was fallen upon campaigners, and the election result reflected that
it was too late to get back to simply governing. It reflected how Liberals in
Canada had telegraphed confidence for too long. The election result is a
madness in a way, as Canadians are in the middle of a multiple national crises.
There
is also Americanisation of Canadian political media, which focuses on party
leaders, and not on representatives which common people actually vote for. A journalism
like that can mislead, but this is how things are now in Canada.
Joseph Brean
in National Post had also shared some interesting anecdotes in his Oped. He compared
Trudeau with a parable of a foolish prince, and wrote: ‘The reason for this
gamble was simple. Trudeau wanted to lock in his approval. Things were
fine for him, as prime minister, but they could be better. It is a
familiar storyline. Canadians recognise it. If Trudeau were a character from a
fable, he would be the dog who, walking alongside a river, sees his own
reflection in the water. Mistaking it for another dog carrying a better piece
of meat, he opens his mouth to snatch it, losing his own real meat in the
process.'
The Dog and his Reflection is an old fable by Aesop, retold
innumerable times in various ways, with a moral about trading substance for
shadow. It cautions against risking the good in pursuit of the perfect.
Pauline
Greenhill, professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of
Winnipeg, and Canada’s leading academic authority on folklore and fairy tales also noted how different Trudeau is from traditional male folkloric hero, five years
after. When he first became the prime minister, one could just embody Trudeau
into an imaginative folklore hero. Sure enough, he was a first-born political
prince, not unprivileged as folk heroes usually are, and he did not seem
exceptionally humble or clever like these heroes, but he had a strong and
diverse team and a cabinet with half women, including an Indigenous justice
minister. Now, many argue that Trudeau’s political career has fallen
just like seen in familiar plotlines that reflect rash confidence, pride and failures
in recognising the structural qualities of a decision.
There
has been a certain unCanadian behaviour during this election, which makes it
understandable that Trudeau is in a pit of his own digging, as his failure to
ensure a majority also asserts his political defeat, and a depletion of his political
capital.
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