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Are Canadians still willing to give Justin Trudeau a second look?
CBC Canada ^ | Jan 27, 2024 3:00 AM CST | | Aaron Wherry

Posted on 01/27/2024 3:46:55 PM PST by Red Badger

The prime minister probably can't expect affection at this point — but can he still get a hearing?

Whatever Ken McDonald, the Liberal MP for Avalon, said or meant to say about Justin Trudeau's leadership, the most cutting assessment of the prime minister published this week might have come from Jeanette Dyke, a patron of Tiny's Bar and Grill in Paradise, N.L.

"I just cannot take Justin Trudeau anymore," she told Radio-Canada. "He has charisma … but to me he's annoying."

Those comments speak to the most basic challenge of political leadership. The TV cameras that watch politicians daily magnify every facet and quirk of their personalities. And like a houseguest — one who can be blamed for every grievance about the economy, or the real estate market, or the price of gas — a political leader's odds of overstaying their welcome grow with each passing day.

"I think the relationship between a political leader and the people is a bit like a marriage," Liberal MP Marcus Powlowski told reporters this week, venturing a different analogy. "After quite a few years of a marriage, sometimes things don't quite look as rosy as they were at the beginning of a relationship. And if you ask people why, they can't point to one particular thing, but it's a whole bunch of things."

Sometimes it's small things.

"They loved him for his hair to begin with. Now they hate him for his hair," Powlowski continued. "But is that really reason to vote the other way and vote against him?"

To hold on to power through another federal election — his fourth as leader of the Liberal Party — Trudeau probably doesn't need to be widely beloved. He probably can't hope to be.

But he still might need some of the people who are feeling just a bit tired of him right now to give him a second (or third or fourth) look.

The ups and downs of Trudeau's public image

It would not be the first time Canadians have reconsidered Justin Trudeau. Measured over time, public sentiment toward him has run through peaks and valleys.

In the fall of 2014, a little more than a year after he became Liberal leader, Abacus Data found that 39 per cent of survey respondents held a positive view of Trudeau, compared to 29 per cent who felt negatively toward him. By the summer of 2015, with his own missteps and Conservative attack ads eating away at his reputation, his personal numbers were underwater — 30 per cent positive against 33 per cent negative.

Shortly thereafter came the surge that brought Trudeau to office. In November 2015, Abacus found Trudeau had a net score of plus-37 (56 per cent positive, 19 per cent negative).

Those numbers eroded over the two years that followed, as one would expect for any prime minister. But then they plunged with the SNC-Lavallin affair in 2019. A year later, the numbers flipped back in the other direction when Canadians rallied around the federal government's response to the pandemic.

Trudeau's numbers didn't move decidedly back into the negative until the 2021 election. But that turn against the prime minister has only continued since, to the point where a line graph of positive and negative sentiment now shows a yawning gap. Earlier this month, Abacus found that Trudeau's net score was minus-34 (25 per cent positive, 59 per cent negative), nearly the inverse of his highest point in 2015.

What's dragging him down now?

Unlike the drop in 2019, it's hard to point to any single precipitating event to explain the turn in public attitudes on Trudeau. It's probably some combination of things, big and small.

There are a several factors that would be dragging down any prime minister right now. At least some of the drop in Liberal fortunes seemed to coincide with interest rate hikes by the Bank of Canada. Inflation has fallen markedly from its recent highs, but the impact of higher prices is still being felt. And the current government has been in office now for eight years. (Trudeau is also far from the only G7 leader struggling with public opinion these days.)

And while voters can tire of any political leader eventually, Trudeau hasn't always conducted himself like a politician worried about exhausting the public's patience. He has been a very public prime minister and he does few things quietly, up to and including his Christmas vacations.

The decline in his public standing might call for grand moves — something like the Liberal campaign ads in 2015 that directly took on Conservative claims that Trudeau wasn't "ready." But Trudeau is also contending now with a media narrative that will tend to interpret any big move as evidence of desperation or flailing.

What the Liberals can do — and perhaps must do, if they want to win the next election — is ask Canadians to look closer at the other guy.

Will the next election be a choice or a referendum?

"The big thing is, compare him to the alternatives," Powlowski said this week. "And I think if you look at the alternatives, and I think as Canadians get to know Pierre Poilievre better, a lot of people will realize, 'Okay, Trudeau's not so bad.'"

The Liberals intensified their focus on the Conservative leader last fall and Trudeau used significant portions of his televised speech to caucus this week to highlight his differences with Poilievre.

In the lead-up to the 2019 election, Trudeau's team internalized the idea that the vote needed to be "a choice, not a referendum." That framing is likely twice as important for the Liberals now. The Liberals won that election while Trudeau's personal numbers were in the red — he began that campaign at 35 per cent positive, 46 per cent negative.

At 25 per cent, Trudeau obviously is in worse shape now. But his personal approval is also not too far below the 33 per cent of the popular vote the Liberals won in 2021 — enough to win 160 seats and retain government.

If (or when) inflation falls enough for voters to notice, and if interest rates decline in tandem, some of the dark clouds surrounding Trudeau and his government might part. That might allow Canadians to see him in a different light.

That might be the best scenario Trudeau can hope for. On the other hand, he might reach a point (if he hasn't already) where too many voters are simply unwilling to give him a hearing — where no matter what Trudeau's government has to say for itself, a critical mass of voters simply can't take him and his hair anymore.

And if the Conservatives can successfully turn the next election into a referendum on Trudeau, the Canadian voter could end up deciding to marry someone very different.


TOPICS: Government; History; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: donatefreerepublic; jimknows
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1 posted on 01/27/2024 3:46:55 PM PST by Red Badger
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To: JudyinCanada

Ping!..................


2 posted on 01/27/2024 3:47:24 PM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger

Glanced through the excerpt — didn’t see any mention of his abuse of power ordering lockdowns and censorship during the phony covid “emergency”


3 posted on 01/27/2024 3:55:59 PM PST by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion, or satire, or both.)
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To: Red Badger

CBC = government-paid propaganda.


4 posted on 01/27/2024 3:57:56 PM PST by Ge0ffrey
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5 posted on 01/27/2024 3:59:18 PM PST by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion, or satire, or both.)
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To: BenLurkin
Visual evidence of Trump grabbing a pussy....


6 posted on 01/27/2024 4:00:34 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: BenLurkin
Glanced through the excerpt — didn't see any mention of his abuse of power ordering lockdowns and censorship during the phony covid “emergency”

Nor the fact even Castreau's hand selected courts are finding his actions now unconstitutional.

7 posted on 01/27/2024 4:01:37 PM PST by llevrok (“In a time of deceit telling, the truth is a revolutionary act.” ― George Orwell)
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To: Red Badger

I don’t know one person who would vote for this buffoon again. This includes a few people who voted for him previously. I have never seen a politician hated so much. If I had to compare his popularity with another politician from the past, it would have to be Romania’s Ceausescu.


8 posted on 01/27/2024 4:01:41 PM PST by JudyinCanada (The left is loathsome, beyond anything I could have believed.)
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To: Red Badger

Canadian are sappy

All they care about is hockey

And even in hockey they are losing their dominance

Bahahaha

By the way did you guys see Trudeau clapping during a woman’s hockey game he attended.

He is gay


9 posted on 01/27/2024 4:03:12 PM PST by forYourChildrenVote4Bush
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To: Red Badger
"The big thing is, compare him to the alternatives," Powlowski said this week. "And I think if you look at the alternatives, and I think as Canadians get to know Pierre Poilievre better, a lot of people will realize, 'Okay, Trudeau's not so bad.'"

Only if you're an idiot. I think Poilievre is the best thing that's happened in Canadian politics for years.

10 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:13 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Ge0ffrey

Yup. CBC is all-in for the Canadian Left.


11 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:17 PM PST by Steely Tom ([Voter Fraud] == [Civil War])
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To: BenLurkin

It’s the CBC. If people can’t remember Fidel Jr’s tyrannnical policies during COVID, he’s back in. Or too dumb to think that what he did to the truckers could ever happen to them. No, it’s about his hair.


12 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:20 PM PST by mikey_hates_everything
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To: Red Badger

Canada needs to HURRY UP and BAN Tucker Carlson’s speech in Calgary, as it cold easily put an end to their ‘democracy’.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNqeEidfvSU


13 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:32 PM PST by BobL (Trump gets my vote, even if I have to write him in; Millions of others will do the same)
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To: Red Badger

....and keep in mind that the CBC is state run media, as they all are (except Rebel News). Trudeau started paying the media nearly a billion dollars a year a few years ago, but the CBC was government-run before that. Sounds like they’re starting the long haul of trying to sway people into thinking he’s not so bad. Nobody’s having it.


14 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:42 PM PST by JudyinCanada (The left is loathsome, beyond anything I could have believed.)
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To: forYourChildrenVote4Bush
Canadian are sappy All they care about is hockey

And that bitch, Anne Murray, too!

15 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:48 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: BenLurkin

And to think, both of them are supposed to take the other seriously! LOL


16 posted on 01/27/2024 4:04:54 PM PST by workerbee (==)
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To: Red Badger
And I think if you look at the alternatives, and I think as Canadians get to know Pierre Poilievre better, a lot of people will realize, 'Okay, Trudeau's not so bad.'"

Dream on. As an American very time I hear Poilievre I love the guy more, and so do normal Canadians. I'm not even sure where he falls on the Conservative Purity Index but he smacks around the media and his opponents like no politician I have ever heard besides Trump.

17 posted on 01/27/2024 4:06:33 PM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: JudyinCanada

The problem is, it’s not a direction, but it’s based on the party that controls Parliament. So people may vote for their Liberal representative, even though they despise Trudeau, but in the end, Trudeau stays, with the help of the NDP.


18 posted on 01/27/2024 4:06:37 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Red Badger

Damage control. Now available in maple flavor.


19 posted on 01/27/2024 4:07:00 PM PST by SpaceBar
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To: dfwgator

it’s not a direction should be “direct election”


20 posted on 01/27/2024 4:07:01 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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