Front Burner - What’s driving polarization in Canadian politics?
Episode Date: August 2, 2023Were the ‘Freedom Convoy’ protests in Ottawa a “peaceful protest against a tyrannical ruler,” or a bunch of people driven by “lies and misinformation, disturbing the peace of everyone, and b...eing bigoted”? These two conflicting perspectives help illustrate Canadian polarization in a new report from the Public Policy Forum, authored by journalist Justin Ling, titled ‘Far and Wider: The Rise of Polarization in Canada.’ Ling joins guest host Tamara Khandaker to discuss political polarization in Canada, what’s driving it, and how it’s impacting young Canadians. For transcripts of this series, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts
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Hey everyone, Tamara here. Before we begin, I just wanted to let you know that we've started
putting the show
on YouTube every day. A lot of people are listening to podcasts there, so it just made sense. And
you'll still be able to find us on all of the podcast apps, but if you want to listen on YouTube,
you can find us on the CBC News channel under podcasts. All right, that's it. I hope you liked today's episode.
About 10,000 people by one police estimate are now in the nation's capital. The crowd is very pumped up, boisterous, excited to be here. When you look back at pictures from the Freedom Convoy protests in Ottawa, the wide lens shots of the Sea of People by Parliament Hill standing in the bitter cold, waving Canadian flags and handmade signs, what do you see?
It's a question the independent think tank Public Policy Forum recently posed to 1,500 young Canadian adults.
Forum recently posed to 1,500 young Canadian adults. Looking at the exact same image, one saw a, quote, peaceful protest against a tyrannical ruler, while another saw a bunch of people driven
by, quote, lies and misinformation, disturbing the peace of everyone and being bigoted. These two
perspectives on the same event, they're so different, totally irreconcilable.
And they're a microcosm of a greater concern in our political culture right now, the concern that
Canadians are polarized. But despite the widespread anxiety about polarization,
the public discussions of it, they often feel surface level. For the last little while, journalist Justin Ling, with the Public Policy Forum,
has been doing a deep dive on this.
And today they published a new report called Far and Widening,
The Rise of Polarization in Canada.
Justin's on the show today, and we're going to talk about political polarization here,
what's driving it, and how it's impacting young Canadians.
Hey, Justin.
Hey, Tamara. Thanks for having me.
Thanks for being here.
So I think if we're going to spend the whole conversation
talking about polarization in Canada,
it would be good to start with defining our terms. So what do we mean when we talk about polarization in Canada, it would be good to start with defining our terms.
So what do we mean when we talk about polarization?
That is a really good question that does not really have a short answer, which is too bad.
It's one of those things in the report, I sort of just say, you know, we know it when we see it,
and we do. And if we poll Canadians, we consistently say this country is polarized.
But when you get to trying to measure it at a country level, it gets really murky.
Now, if you go to the U.S., it's easy because you can see the effects of polarization in the politics with the rise of people like Donald Trump.
You can see it on issues, the huge divergence on abortion access, on LGBTQ rights.
So it's really, really easy to point to polarization in the US and elsewhere.
It gets really hard in Canada because we haven't seen quite that explosion of populism.
We haven't seen that huge shift on policy matters.
That even led to one pollster declaring rather smugly that Canada is sort of free or maybe
even immune from polarization altogether.
But really, I mean, if you look at things like the Freedom Convoy, the protests that have followed
the Prime Minister around, if you look at some of the breakdowns in communication, the growing
animosity and distrust and anxiety and paranoia about not just the state of our economy, but the
state of our politics and society. If you look at some of the decline in trust of traditional institutions from the media
to government, if you look at the ways in which people have increasingly become angry towards
our politicians and leaders, I think all of that taken together indicates that we do have a real
polarization problem in this country. But again, if you go and talk to
people, they feel it. They have stories from their everyday lives. They have experiences over the last
couple of years through the pandemic that they can point to and they can say, you know, we are
getting more polarized and they feel it. So I think, frankly, that's good enough for me.
Yeah. Yeah. But when I think of issues that are more contentious elsewhere, like you mentioned, things like abortion, immigration, there's still fairly broad consensus here, no?
L liberalism. We are a country that has had this kind of cross-partisan consensus on some of these big issues for quite some time. That doesn't mean we can't go backwards, but that also doesn't mean
that just because we agree on some big social issues that we're immune or prevented from
polarization, right? You can have partisan effective polarization. You can have people who can no longer be in the same room, who can't discuss things, who can't come to a consensus on things, who can't work together. You can have all that, even as you agree on some big social issues. And that's kind of currently what we're seeing.
University of Toronto professor named Eric Merkley. He actually helped advise on this report. He wrote some research that I relied on in writing this. And what he's found is that increasingly partisans
in this country don't recognize each other. And it's a really interesting thing that mirrors
the divide between Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. It's not just that. It's also,
you know, media sensationalism around partisan conflict and
the cut and thrust of politics that gives people a pretty distorted view of what, of both the social
composition of the parties and how different they really are in terms of race, class, religion,
and the like, but also in terms of their ideological beliefs. Even if we still have this consensus on some social issues,
what you tend to see are conservatives who don't identify at all with liberals, who see them as
other or alien or in some cases anti-Canadian or corrupt. And on the flip side, you see liberals
who see conservatives as being deeply illiberal, as being kind of
against Canadian values, as being racist and anti-vaxxers. And he actually quantifies it,
right? Conservatives overestimate the number of LGBTQ liberals by a significant margin.
Liberals overestimate the number of unvaccinated conservatives by a huge margin. So the fact that
we no longer even recognize each other is indicative of that divide growing between us and the lack of sort of overlap and conversation that we used to have in this country and that used to be a sign of kind of constructive and useful politics.
If political polarization is a concern, it's probably worth looking more closely at politicians themselves, which you do in the report. How are we seeing our politicians become more polarized here in Canada?
more polarized here in Canada? It's funny, you know, they are both sort of a mover and a moved by polarization, right? Our politicians absolutely bear a tremendous amount of blame
for our current polarized state, the ways in which they describe their opponents.
He is in love with the sound of his own voice. He calls single mothers polluters because they buy groceries.
God say nothing and do nothing.
The conservative leader has been purposefully using his videos to appeal to far-right misogynistic online movements. the ways in which they frame matters of public policy and issues of national importance have
all contributed to Canadians demonizing their political opponents and have also contributed
to this rising anxiety that has made politics and some of these issues a sort of a life or death
matter for some people. But at the same time, their own supporters, their voters, their party
members, their donors are also being affected by this state of polarization and are demanding more ideological purity, more cutthroatedness from their politicians, and more sort of this quest and an opposite reaction happening here.
You actually heard outgoing Conservative leader Aaron O'Toole say exactly this when he stood up in the House of Commons for his farewell speech.
Instead of leading, instead of debating our national purpose in this chamber, too many of us are often chasing algorithms down a sinkhole of diversion and division.
He said, we have to be leaders, not followers of our followers, which I thought was a really
interesting way of phrasing that. And this is driven by a whole bunch of things, a need for
social media engagement, a need to win leadership and nomination races, a need for fundraising dollars.
But what it's led to has been both a radicalization of some of our politicians and of their supporters,
and it has led to some of this animosity getting outright violent.
You know, I heard from certain members of parliament who point blank looked at me and
said, we become afraid of our own supporters. How can you exist
in a political realm when you're relying on the support, but are also deeply fearful
of the people who are voting for you? That's a really problematic place to be.
Can you give me some recent examples of how you see polarization or polarized political rhetoric in Canada? to unvaccinated people. And, you know, there's a lot of excuses being made for the way he phrased it, but, you know,
he point blank said that people who are unvaccinated tend to be misogynist.
But there are also people who are fiercely opposed
to vaccination.
Who are extremists.
Who don't believe in science, who are often misogynist,
often racist too.
And he even admonished his political opponents
for not being strong enough on vaccines.
That sort of rhetoric deeply divided people.
As one Indigenous leader phrased it to me, it made people add up the score, right?
They looked at a man who was supposed to be their leader, who was supposed to be unifying them in this public health project, right?
be unifying them in this public health project, right? No matter what your feelings are about unvaccinated people, the leader of the country talking that way was incredibly polarizing.
And then on the flip side, you saw the reaction to that, right? When Pierre Pauliev was running
for leader after Aaron O'Toole had been ousted, he looked at those people who felt disaffected,
who felt, you know, cast down upon, who felt like they'd been marginalized by
the prime minister. And he spoke to them in their own language. They also don't want any scrutiny of
this grand reset the prime minister is now talking about, this idea that he's going to
renovate Canadian society. He actually repeated and mirrored some of the conspiracy theories
that had taken root in that movement and used their
energy and excitement to raise money and eventually to the win the leadership of the
Conservative Party of Canada, right? You know, these people know what they're doing. They know
that they're leveraging distrust and animosity and polarization present in Canadian society,
and they're weaponizing it for their own political futures. It is contributing to our current polarization crisis.
And speaking of raising money, one thing that I found interesting in the report is the role that
you found fundraising is playing in all of this. How do the pressures of fundraising contribute to
this issue of polarization? It's massive. We don't talk about this a lot, right?
Over the last 20 years, we've got rid of corporate and union money in politics. And I think we mostly
agree or almost entirely agree that was a good thing. At the same time, we got rid of the per
vote subsidy that was taxpayer funding for parties, major political parties. I think a lot of people
have remember that happening, they kind of think
to themselves, great, now individual donors are contributing to our political system and all is
well. Well, all is not well. The constant anxiety that members of parliament face to raise money
from their constituents and their supporters is constant, right? They use dollars raised as a sign
of their own momentum and support and it is a constant
battle to get people to open their wallets to contribute a dollar five dollars ten dollars
twenty dollars you know seventeen hundred dollars and to do that they use these high energy high
emotion appeals to fear and anxiety and worry that that kind of pushes people to give money in order to take back their country
or protect what we've built. It becomes a moral imperative to give money. And once you start that
financial relationship, one where you need to give me cash so that I can keep fighting to preserve
what we've built or to stop the barbarians at the gates. Once you build that financial sort of relationship, it really embeds that emotion kind of going forward and gives the most energized, most activated people, you know, a stake in what you're doing.
And that can be a productive and a positive thing. I think you can look at Bernie Sanders as somebody who managed to sort of bridge the divide between disaffection and polarization, but also sort of positive messaging.
But on the flip side, you can point to Donald Trump, who is constantly bilking seniors out of huge amounts of money and making them angry in the process.
Every single political party in Canada does this.
They do so by, frankly, weaponizing misinformation in the process. Every single political party in Canada does this. They do so by, frankly,
weaponizing misinformation in some cases.
You know, Pierre Poliev talks about
the evil world economic form,
often Dave of Switzerland,
that is maybe trying to take over the country.
Work for Canada.
Work for Canada.
If you want to go to Davos to that conference,
make it a one-way ticket.
And if you don't give $5,
now Klaus Schwab will come to your house and kick your dog or whatever,
right? The Liberal Party says that the Conservatives are going to give everyone an AR-15.
This is an AR-15 rifle. It was designed to kill people.
Arnold Toole promised the gun lobby that he would legalize this and 1,500 other assault weapons.
All of this kind of ridiculous rhetoric is necessary to push people to keep donating. And these parties are constantly cash starved. And it's a real problem that we do not talk about.
Yeah. Another thing I realized when I was going through the report is most of the time when I see what's happening in the House of Commons is when there's a clip that goes viral.
An angry Jagmeet Singh called Bloc MP a Lantarian racist.
Conservative party members can stand with people who wave swastikas.
They can stand with people who wave the Confederate flags.
And I condemn him for when he dressed up in racist costumes so many times he forgot them all.
We condemn it always,
Mr. Spade. And it's usually a politician giving a really angry speech towards someone across the aisle. And can you just talk about the role that social media plays in political discourse and
polarization in Canada? Yeah, so it's really kind of du jour to say, oh, you know, social media ruins politics.
But we don't often talk about the real specifics of why and how that works. Social media over the
last number of 15, 10, 15 years or so, has increasingly prioritized high emotion content
in the same way that high emotion content leads to more fundraising dollars, high emotion content on social media is what gets the most reactions.
And what has kind of risen to meet that trend is that the House of Commons has given every single member of Parliament and their staffers and the partisans behind them new tools to clip and share everything that happens in the House of Commons. It used to be, going back to the 70s and the 80s when we first started broadcasting Parliament,
maybe one or two clips from the day
would make it onto the evening news.
Unless you're watching CPAC all day and every day,
you wouldn't see the sort of mechanics
of the House of Commons in real time or really at all.
And what that meant is that you could actually have
those sort of frank and honest discussions.
It meant that you wouldn't have to constantly be playing the overwrought partisan in every exchange you had across the aisle.
As the internet has come along and as the House of Commons has let every member of parliament take those clips,
the performances have become much more dramatic.
And you've seen this constant effort to feed Facebook and other platforms.
And the results have been that videos like the ones you've seen that are nasty and angry and
accusatory do orders of magnitude better than speeches or interventions or debates that are
more about compromise or cooperation or thoughtful policy solutions. Now, the House of Commons is always going to be a
partisan and sort of jousting body. But there was always a delicate balance that was maintained.
And that balance is now completely and totally out of whack. And we have this sort of social
mediafication of the House of Commons to thank for it. In the Dragon's Den, a simple pitch can lead to a life-changing connection.
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to this podcast, just search for Money for Couples. The thing is, even if the partisan rhetoric in
Ottawa is polarizing, it doesn't always seem like the actual policy substance is.
Like when you look at something as important as housing, I don't really see radically different solutions being presented from our mainstream parties.
Everyone in power seems to be suggesting shades of the same thing.
So what does it say that the rhetoric is polarized when the policy substance isn't?
we love to talk about polarization as though it stands alone, as though everything else is working and this new polarization is the only problem. But that's not the case. I mean, you can see the
decline in the quality of services in this country. You can see the rise in homelessness. You can see
the rising death toll of the opioid crisis, right? People can see with their own two eyes that this
country is not doing as well as it was, let's say,
just before the pandemic.
And this is true in every rich nation, right?
We as the Western world are going through some tough times right now.
And the more that that happens and the more the government seems indifferent to those
realities, the more people are going to go rushing for alternative solutions and explanations.
And that's part of
the process of polarization. And it's really interesting to look at this government in
particular. You know, I spoke to a former cabinet minister who told me really bluntly, we're not
good at doing big things and we're really bad at telling people things are better than they
actually are. We're really insistent on managing problems and managing the message as
opposed to actually solving them and being honest with people. And you can point to the continuing
crisis of clean drinking water on First Nations across the country. You can point to the housing
crisis like you talked about. This week, the government sort of threw its hand up and said,
well, we're not the main level of government responsible for the housing crisis.
And I'll be blunt as well. Housing isn't a primary federal responsibility.
So the more people see government taking kind of credit for all the good things it's done,
denying all of the crises that are directly before us, the more they get angry and disaffected. And
how could we possibly blame them? And this is
every level of government. I spoke to a former mayor of a big city who looked me dead in the
eye and said, you know, people don't understand just how destroyed cities got during the pandemic
and how difficult it's been to rebound. Part of the process of fighting polarization is A,
of course, getting better at actually governing and delivering services, but also B, being honest with people, actually going to them hat in hand and saying, listen off we're going to be because the more governments decide to double down and keep playing this sort
of divisive wedge politics instead of talking about nation building again, the more we're
going to see people sort themselves into their political space and just keep marching forward
like we're doing right now. So your report shows how this has left a lot of young people,
especially feeling pretty disaffected, ambivalent. What role do you see that hopelessness or frustration playing in the polarization? And
what do you think can be done to address that? I don't think it's hopelessness. It is frustration,
there's no doubt. We did some polling of youth across the country, particularly youth who don't
really normally do public polling. My excellent colleagues in the public policy forum put together
these roundtables in communities straight across the the country online and in person. And we heard sort of point
blank from a lot of these youth about the realities they're facing. And it was not hopelessness that
we heard, but I think there was a frustration and a feeling like they're banging their heads
against the wall. We heard them say housing is a real problem.
We heard them say the homelessness crisis is top of mind.
We heard about the opioid crisis.
We heard about all of these problems that they care deeply about and they want to solve,
but they no longer feel like the political process is the route to solve them.
And again, how could you possibly blame them when they turn on the news
or when they see clips on Twitter or Instagram or TikTok or wherever, they see those high rhetoric,
high emotion, anger-inducing, spittle-flying clips of one side accusing the other of being
corrupt or out of touch or whatever. And it doesn't feel like that nonsense is leading towards any constructive solution.
What we heard was a real desire to put aside these constant accusations and these recriminations and this complete red-faced rage.
What we heard was a desire to actually roll your sleeves up and get stuff done and to hear credible policy
solutions to the problems that face us. And I know this sounds sort of optimistic and maybe a little
doe-eyed, but it's what we heard and it's not exactly what we expected to hear either. There
is an appetite out there for real serious solutions and I think this extends across age groups. The problem is the partisans
who govern these parties, which are a relatively small cohort in this country. Those people have
been sort of left to run our political system. Meanwhile, the other 35 million of us are left
to kind of throwing our hands up and wondering what the hell happened to our political system.
And I think youth are the ones who are putting that in the most kind of direct and pointed terms.
Okay, Justin, thank you.
Maybe you want to tell people where they can read the report?
Yeah, thank you so much for having me.
You can find the report on ppfforum.ca.
And I'll have some little companion stuff to the report on my newsletter,
Bug-Eyed and Shameless. So keep your eyes out for it there.
Cool. It was great to talk to you. Thanks.
Thanks.
All right. That's all for today. I'm Tamara Kendacker.
Thank you so much for listening, and I will talk to you tomorrow.
Thank you.