Why the silence around the scandal threatening Justin
Trudeau?
Jack Bernhardt: The Canadian prime minister is fighting for
his political life. But you’d never know it from British media coverage
It must be great being Canadian. Instead of Greggs, they’ve
got Tim Hortons. Instead of the cartoonist Matt, they’ve got Kate Beaton.
Instead of an economy on the edge of a cliff edge and the prospect of mass
chaos, they’ve got moose. And best of all, instead of a malfunctioning robot
who veers between doing impressions of insurance-obsessed mongooses and
Mussolini, they’ve got Justin Trudeau! Perfect, beautiful Justin Trudeau, the
woke Ken doll of the G8 – who last week apologised for eating a chocolate bar
in the Canadian parliament! What a little scamp! While we have to deal with
warring MPs and a failing democracy, the worst scandal the Canadians have to
deal with is over a Twix!
Justin Trudeau’s disgrace is like watching a unicorn get run
over
Leah McLaren
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Oh, and a huge corruption case that threatens to bring down
the prime minister, the government and one of the biggest contractors in the
country.
If you actually look at Canadian politics, and try to ignore
the UK media’s perception of Justin Trudeau – they see him as a Calvin Klein
model who’s pretty good at Sporcle quizzes – a darker picture emerges. In
February the Canadian attorney general, Jody Wilson-Raybould, quit her post
after allegations that she was improperly pressured into dropping charges
against SNC-Lavalin, a major Canadian engineering firm. A string of
resignations followed – including former cabinet minister Jane Philpott, who
said last Thursday that there was “much more to be told” on the scandal, with
the implication that Trudeau himself had personally lobbied the attorney
general to drop the case.
As Canadian stories go, it’s steamier and meatier than a
bucket of poutine – but at the time of writing the only reference to the
scandal (or indeed any Canadian politics) on the front page of the BBC US &
Canada section is a video of Trudeau apologising for the incident I will
henceforth refer to as Chocogate. I understand why Chocogate was a popular
story, as it combines two of Canada’s greatest loves – chocolate and apologising
– but really it seems like the BBC has buried the lede. It’s like reporting the
assassination of Abraham Lincoln with the headline “Mrs Lincoln’s enjoyment of
Mars bar ruined by nearby gunshot”.
Part of this is to do with Trudeau’s own handling of the media:
he uses them in a similarly cynical way to Donald Trump or Theresa May. That’s
not to say he’s as bad or as dangerous – indeed, no MP in Canada has said
they’ve received death threats because of the way Trudeau ate a Caramac – but
he can distract the media just as effectively. What Trump does through outrage
and May does through abject fascinating incompetence, Trudeau does through
charm, and it’s a charm that works best on the outside world.
I’m not suggesting this is some big cover-up – a global conspiracy
to make sure that Justin Trudeau is remembered as the guy with silly socks
rather than a corrupt politician who bullies his cabinet on behalf of big
business. It’s more that, in the UK, Canada – and, indeed, most other countries
– doesn’t seem to be worth talking about, unless we’re using it to compare with
ourselves. Since 2016 Trudeau has been one of the go-to “good guys”, held up as
the perfect political antidote to everything that is wrong with our own
politicians. While Michael Gove was doing down experts, Trudeau was explaining
quantum computing in a painfully staged press conference. While Donald Trump
refused to visit a cemetery because of a few showers, Trudeau was giving a
speech without an umbrella. While Boris Johnson was, well, being Boris Johnson,
Trudeau was declaring himself a feminist and promoting women to key positions
in his cabinet.
Canada gets lazily portrayed as a utopia with perfect
politics because flaws aren’t useful to the narrative. Canada exists in our
imagination only through a series of superficial, shareable videos of Trudeau
hugging pandas, just so we can look at them and complain that our prime
minister never hugs a panda. The upshot of this means that when serious
allegations emerge, we ignore them – because if we have to engage with them, it
shatters our simplistic concepts of Good Politics (Obama! John Oliver! That
Gillette Advert!) and Bad Politics (Brexit! Trump! That Pepsi Advert!).
'He's not a bad person, but …' scandal-hit Justin Trudeau
turns voters off
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It’s a trend we tend to repeat with global stories– look at
the binary attitude some remainers have towards Emmanuel Macron or Angela
Merkel, extolling their virtues while ignoring the former’s brutal austerity
policies, or the latter’s startling political decline. New Zealand’s prime
minister, Jacinda Ardern, has been rightly praised for her response to the
Christchurch terrorist attack, but the instinct of the media has still been to
compare her actions to our own leaders, rather than to analyse what she did
right on her own terms.
There’s a danger that we don’t see other countries and other
leaders as anything other than funhouse mirrors to reflect ourselves –
distorting stereotypes and eradicating nuance to define our own identity, a
kind of British and American exceptionalism that appears deferential to other
countries but is actually oddly insulting.
At times like these, it’s tempting to cherrypick the best
aspects of the politicians of the rest of the world and build a Frankenstein
prime minister – the cheekbones of Justin Trudeau, the tech-savviness of
Emmanuel Macron, the dancing ability of anyone but Theresa May. But the real
world doesn’t work like that. Life isn’t a stage-managed photoshoot. There are always bigger scandals than
chocolate.
• Jack Bernhardt is a comedy writer and occasional performer
1 comment:
Lool shut up, your blogs meaningless, human rights activist whilst your sons a phisher lmfaoo :')
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