Monday, April 17, 2023

Trump In The Great White North

When Trump flags showed up as part of the Truckers' Convoy in Ottawa, it was clear that the American Disease had drifted across our border. Michael Harris writes that Donald Trump has become part of our political conversation:

Not that the political arena was ever a monastery. There have always been politicians who couldn’t keep their zippers up, who telephoned judges on active cases, who told the occasional whopper, who drove their cars while over-refreshed, who did favours for friends, and who accepted favours in return.  

But there has never been a time when misogyny was effectively a platform in a major party’s policy playbook, as it is now in the GOP in the United States.  

There has never been a time when a United States president lied reflexively on everything from his tawdry dalliances, to his sleazy fundraising—also based on barefaced falsehoods. The 2020 U.S. election wasn’t stolen. But the money sent in by naive Trump supporters to fight the electoral results in court—all $200-million worth—apparently was. One can only wonder why wire fraud charges haven’t yet been laid.  

And who ever heard of an indicted defendant in a criminal case vowing to continue his bid for the presidency, even if he is convicted of felonies? That is exactly what Trump told fellow serial liar Tucker Carlson of Fox News in a recent interview. Spoken like a man who wants to dump the U.S. Constitution and defund the FBI and the Department of Justice. Trump has driven tribalism and iconoclasm in politics to such extremes that his supporters in Congress have even subpoenaed Alvin Bragg, the district attorney of Manhattan, to appear before the House Judiciary Committee.  

The problem is that Trump's middle finger to the world approach to things is showing up here:

Canadians have supported progressive parties at the polls federally. But there is growing evidence that some of the elements of Trumpian politics are creeping into our national conversation.  

For starters, the critiques of the current federal government have more to do with swiftboating than sober analysis. Pierre Poilievre and the Conservative Party of Canada have put the crosshairs on Justin Trudeau, highlighting his alleged unfitness to run the country in highly personal terms, as opposed to offering a counter vision of what a Conservative government would do differently.

The examples abound. Trudeau’s blackface of yesteryear is proof he is a racist. Trudeau’s use of the Emergencies Act to end the “Freedom Convoy” and its chaotic occupation of Ottawa is proof he is a dictator. Trudeau’s handling of alleged Chinese interference in the last federal election shows he is covering up for the Chinese and is perhaps a traitor. This from the party that sold a Canadian energy company to the Chinese communists for $15.1-billion, and bartered away Canadian sovereignty in the Canada-China Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement.  

That is tawdry politics. The invitation to voters is to personally dislike and reject Trudeau, rather than embrace a better candidate with better policies and a better vision. The public dialogue is not so much a contest of ideas between political parties, as it has traditionally been, but a kind of cage fight of the Texas death-match variety. Apart from being distressingly Trumpian, the approach taken by the official opposition is totally unnecessary.  

It's not that the Liberals are above criticism:

The Liberals are open to legitimate criticism on a number of policy fronts. Did the government get the balance right between prudent public health measures and civil liberties during the COVID-19 pandemic?  

Did the government react to the crisis of inflation quickly enough and with the right measures?  

Given the desperate problems facing many Canadians on the health-care front, did the government go far enough in its recent rescue package with hard pressed provincial governments?

But “Fuck Trudeau” signs, like “Fuck Biden” signs and “Fuck Ford” signs, put up by fanatical supporters incited by relentless personal attacks on political leaders, are not the way to conduct a democracy.  

And, for Trump and his supporters, it's democracy that is the enemy.

Image: The Hill Times

12 comments:

zoombts said...

None of this talk comes as a surprise as I have spent the last four years living in Rural Illinois. On my walkabouts I run into many people and I have noticed that very few Americans talk politics. I ask my neighbour why that was. He jokingly said"because they have guns". In all seriousness I have met up with people who have taken interest in my being Canadian and have had no problem criticising the prime minister. One said, "what's with Canada" because of their shutting down the right wing evangelicals refusing to stop religious meetings during Covid. "They are taking away their right to pray". Another voiced their dislike for Trudeau because he was a dictator keeping the belongings of the Truckers. Another voiced concern that he would rather live in the US than live in my country under a dictator who was against the wonderful truckers who work so tirelessly for the public. Another one took me to task for getting a vaccine and figured I had about five years to live. As his conspiracy theories started to escalate he told me to "Pick a lane", leash my dog, which was already leashed, and he would show me a thing or two. With that I turned and walked away because of a little thing they have here called stand your ground. All in all there is a right wing anger that is wide spread certainly through out North America and I think that it is to be expected when one lives on a diet of Fox News. American Exceptionalism is a very abstract thought that seems to make everyone think that they are John Wayne.

Owen Gray said...

At the root of American exceptionalism is Hollywood, zoombats. It's never been the real thing.

Cap said...

Fuck Ford signs?! I've never seen one of those. Must have been carried by a New Blue supporter. Either that, or Harris is desperately trying to "both sides" the issue.

Northern PoV said...

I loved the stop-sign ploy.

STOP
Harper

It was light-civil-disobedience. It never mislead drivers or obscured the meaning/purpose of the sign.

And (unlike f**k) it was Canadian-polite in a way, eh?

Owen Gray said...

Sounds like Ontarians for Danielle Smith, Cap. The crazies are everywhere.

Owen Gray said...

Sounds like the political equivalent of "I'm sorry," PoV.

Trailblazer said...

Perhaps the only honest thing that Trump said is that he loves the uneducated.
Possibly most politicians think the same way, it makes life easier for them.
Re,
think that it is to be expected when one lives on a diet of Fox News. American Exceptionalism is a very abstract thought that seems to make everyone think that they are John Wayne.

True and lets not forget that Canada has no nationally broadcasted news media that is left or progressive leaning and that 'our ' news is controlled by a handful of mega companies!

News out of India ( not from the National Post) suggests a new variant of Covid could reek havoc in the near future which could well open a can of worms..

TB

Trailblazer said...

Canadas truckers and Poilievre do not have an original thought between them.
Poilievre mimics his US Republican idols whilst the truckers steal a flag first used by the first nations to protest the finding of unmarked graves at old residential schools.

TB

Owen Gray said...

COVID has become a science fiction movie from the 1950s, TB. The bugs keep mutating into something worse.

Owen Gray said...

They're noisy, TB. But they're no intellectual giants.

Anonymous said...

The truckers … please! The real truckers were busy … trucking!

I don’t remember seeing black truckers or Sikh truckers at the Ottawa protest. (They are exposed to racial abuse daily.)

PP - government-funded pos.

UU

Owen Gray said...

I take your point, UU. Most truckers were busy keeping the grocery stores stocked.