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Canada’s snap election has increasingly featured threats of violence against Liberal Party leader Justin Trudeau. Though not the only leader to be harassed, Trudeau’s campaign stops in recent weeks have been disrupted by small, hostile, mostly white crowds – one protester was charged with throwing gravel at Trudeau during a campaign appearance.
Outside of Canada, people might be surprised to hear about the anger directed at a politician known internationally as a youthful, charming, energetic progressive. But our research into Canadian memes has found a persistent, visceral dislike of Trudeau among many right-wing online communities.
In Canada, Trudeau’s a polarising figure – online, people either love or immensely dislike him.
Trudeau, the son of famed former Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau who enjoyed a similar international celebrity, ushered in another bout of Trudeaumania when he won his first election in 2015. That campaign was defined by a focus on “sunny ways” and Instagram style as part of a progressive reset after years of Conservative rule.
Trudeaumania 2.0 was real, another example of how closely linked celebrity and political culture can sometimes be.
The Islamic crescent on Trudeau’s socks is perhaps a conspiratorial explanation of the false belief that Trudeau paid out to Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen who at the age of 15 was detained by the United States at Guantanamo Bay for 10 years for the wartime killing of a US army sergeant in Afghanistan. This allegation ignores the violations of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that led to a $10.5 million court settlement with Khadr.
Accusations that Trudeau has betrayed Canada was a common theme as we began studying grassroots Facebook pages in 2019, another election year. We found no Trudeau meme pages celebrating the leader.
The blackface, however, seemed to matter less to right-wing groups than framing Trudeau as a sexual predator. They “uncovered proof” of Trudeau’s alleged lecherous conduct at past schools and targeted the placement of his hands in a photo from a 2001 Bollywood gala.
Memes became evidence collages designed to prove Trudeau’s past sexual misconduct and used to negatively taint his contemporary image.
The COVID-19 pandemic offered these groups further cause to feel betrayed by Trudeau.
Pandemic lockdowns, vaccine mandates, vaccine passports and disruptions to businesses offered new ways to interpret Trudeau’s arrogance and betrayal. The reaction wasn’t exceptional – most countries in the world are dealing with anti-maskers and anti-vaxxers – but rather the continuation of anti-Trudeau attitudes that regard him as an incompetent leader who is not to be trusted, whether with women or with the economy.
This may explain Trudeau’s niche unpopularity online and the white, violent crowds appearing at his rallies.
As journalist Fatima Syed writes, “These largely white groups of protesters that have followed Trudeau have an unfair privilege that has been afforded to them by all aspects of society: they largely get away with their hateful rhetoric and actions, and don’t get called out or punished for it.”
That privilege might also explain a media blind spot. There is a multitude of right-wing rage online, and as a society, Canada needs to urgently make sense of the racial and cultural power dynamics that are underlying angry and hateful discourse.
(The authors Fenwick McKelvey and Scott DeJong work as Associate Professor in Information and Communication Technology Policy and PhD Candidate and Research Assistant, Communication Studies at Concordia University. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)
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