Canadian “Freedom Convoy” Fizzles as Anti-Vaxers Sputter

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A “Freedom Convoy,” organized by truckers opposed to Canada’s vaccine requirements jammed downtown Ottawa in subzero weekend weather, with signs venting anger at the prime minister (“F*** Trudeau), trucks briefly parked atop Canada’s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and even a Confederate flag snapping in the winter wind.

Striving to head off a Jan. 6-style uprising on Parliament Hill, security forces mobilized.  Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his family were spirited off to an “undisclosed location.”  (Trudeau was already self-quarantined after an offspring was exposed to the COVID-19 virus.)

The trucker protest was immediately embraced by right-wing media from the US with kisses blown its way by Tucker Carlson on Fox News, plus a Twitter blessing from the Rev. Franklin Graham, an ex-President Trump apologist and advocate.

Do events of the weekend suggest that the Great White North is succumbing to the polarization and confrontation lately experienced in the United States and bitter exchanges over COVID-19 restrictions in the United Kingdom?  Befitting people of the north, Canadians have generally been able to keep their cool.

Appearances deceive.  The protest crowd may have been a mile wide, but its support is an inch deep.  Figures show that the vaccination rate for Canada’s truckers mirrors that of all Canadians at nearly 80 percent.  In British Columbia, nearly 90 percent of the population over age 5 have received at least one shot.

Maxime Bernier, a former MP and founder of the Peoples Party of Canada, has been posing for selfies with members of the crowd.  He tried to ride anti-vaxxer sentiment in last September’s Canadian election, but the PPC received just 5 percent of the vote and did not win a single seat the House of Commons. The Liberal Party of Canada won a third consecutive election.

The demonstrators conjured up an extra-constitutional demand reminiscent of Trump forces’ bid to overturn the 2020 American election. They demanded that the Governor General of Canada, titular head of state and the Queen’s representative in Ottawa, join with Canada’s largely toothless Senate and direct the federal government and provinces to rescind all vaccination mandates and COVID-19 restrictions.

The British Columbia government responded on Saturday, announcing extension until June 30 of a requirement that those attending concerts, eating at restaurants, and entering places of business first show a Vaccination Card.  Despite a weariness with the pandemic, B.C. Premier John Horgan continues to score a job approval rating just shy of 60 percent in the polls.

Even if the protest succeeded in removing vaccine requirements, it’s unclear where the truckers would go.  The United States imposes the same vaccine rules on truckers crossing the 49th Parallel as does Canada on those heading back into their country.

In a strong political position, Trudeau has shown no truck for the caravan or the shivering protest.  He warned last week that a “small fringe minority” was manipulating the protest.  “Science tells us that the best way through this pandemic is to get vaccinated. That’s how we end this,” said the PM firmly standing his ground.

In the U.S., the Trump wing makes up more than half of the Republican Party, albeit with signs his nimbus is wearing thin, and perhaps 30 percent of the American electorate.  Support for the political right in Canada is at a much lower level.

The Conservative Party, Canada’s official opposition, doesn’t know where to come down on these protests.  Its leader, Erin O’Toole, told a news conference it was “time to take the temperature down,” but then Tweeted that Trudeau was someone who would “smear and demonize truckers.” O’Toole advocated vaccination during the election campaign but refused to say whether he was requiring Conservative MPs to submit to the needle.

The Tory leader does have far-right bomb throwers in his caucus. Vaccine mandates are “unscientific, vindictive, mean-spirited and promote segregation,” charged MP Leslyn Lewis.  Ex-Conservative leader Andrew Scheer Tweeted that Trudeau is “the biggest threat to freedom in Canada.”  Trudeau is on a “vaccine vendetta,” charged colleague Pierre Polievre.

The most conservative provincial premier in Canada, Scott Moe of Saskatchewan, declared last week: “An unvaccinated trucker does not pose any greater risk than a vaccinated trucker.” He’s wrong, of course, and the COVID-19 infection rate in Saskatchewan speaks to the province’s pokey and partial pandemic response.  Figures for Canada as a whole show unvaccinated Canadians who contract the coronavirus are 19 times more likely to end up in a hospital.

The trucker protest raised $7.5 million (Canadian) in its GoFundMe account, and will try to keep going.  It has not made a favorable impression. After trucks appeared at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson snapped: “Parking on this sacred ground was a sign of complete disrespect.”  The food court at Rideau Center closed down when maskless demonstrators showed up.

Trumpism is a political virus that has not crossed the 49th Parallel.

Joel Connelly
Joel Connelly
I worked for Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1973 until it ceased print publication in 2009, and SeattlePI.com from 2009 to 6/30/2020. During that time, I wrote about 9 presidential races, 11 Canadian and British Columbia elections‎, four doomed WPPSS nuclear plants, six Washington wilderness battles, creation of two national Monuments (Hanford Reach and San Juan Islands), a 104 million acre Alaska Lands Act, plus the Columbia Gorge National Scenic Area.

5 COMMENTS

  1. One of these days you will construct a method to persuade people to your political positions and thoughts, rather than insinuating others are not smart enough. Does the fact that less than 60% of Eligible Americans fully vaccinated lead you to believe that the remaining 40% is easily misguided ? Do a great percentage of Government workers/military/police/firemen that are not, show mental density ? It reminds me of a Priesthood, where the sermons are prescribed with no variations allowed. Salvation is achieved only if you believe…….

  2. Thanks again for a right-on comment, though, those who need to see and hear it have neither the capacity nor desire to learn to see and hear, let alone, comprehend. My long and close association with Canada, particularly BC, continues unabated. A great country that is wiser, by far, than a rather large group within the US.

  3. If Donald Trump is your Emmanuel Goldstein (1984), then you probably spend much of your day screaming at your flat screen.

    Instead of relying on ground truth and objective facts, ever-evolving and agenda-driven narratives appear to have too often been the basis for government policies. Those narratives aren’t holding up particularly well. At the same time, as we gain more knowledge of the coronavirus, its variants, and available therapeutics, people are making their own risk/benefit assessments.

    Prime Minister Trudeau recently accused many Canadian subjects of harboring ‘unacceptable views’ regarding government-imposed vaccination mandates, personal sovereignty over one’s own being notwithstanding. Justine needs to get out more!

  4. It is a fact that a LOT of US right-wing money is coming into Canada, and this event is an example of it. And I suspect that most of the People’s Party funding comes from that source.
    Combine that with the fact that much of Canada’s press is right wing, and it’s a clear message that Canadians need to be wary. And this is a good time to point out that over at least the past 20 years, Joel Connelly has done a better job of reporting on events in British Columbia than most of B.C.’s domestic press.

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