Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

How Justin Trudeau captured the zeitgeist, and how he lost it

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2025 11:04 AM
  • How Justin Trudeau captured the zeitgeist, and how he lost it

In his early days as prime minister, Justin Trudeau was "cool." In the year that followed his majority sweep into power, he appeared in the pages of Vogue, on the cover of a Marvel comic book and on "The Daily Show," chatting with an up-and-coming Hasan Minhaj.

But the same strategy experts and observers say put him in the public eye and won him the youth vote in 2015 may have brought damning scrutiny as political tides changed, particularly as his rivals adopted his online style.

"He created a movement in 2015 and he got a lot of young people engaged," said Alfred Burgesson, who sat on the Prime Minister's Youth Council from 2019 until 2021. 

"The same people that are asking for change today, or looking for a different leader today — a lot of these young people, they started to pay attention because of it."

Trudeau announced plans to step down as prime minister and Liberal leader on Monday following weeks of pressure from within his party. He said he would resign just as soon as a new leader is chosen.

And though sentiment has changed over the years, Burgesson, who is now 28, said Trudeau helped many young people feel seen and heard, in part by establishing the youth council. 

At the time, he said, the way people talked about Trudeau was "incredibly positive." 

Elections Canada data from the 2015 election showed that 57 per cent of voters aged 18 to 24 cast a ballot, an increase of 18.3 percentage points from the almost 39 per cent recorded in the 2011 election. And research conducted by Abacus Data following the 2015 vote suggested Liberals won the support of 45 per cent of young voters.

Mireille Lalancette, a professor of political communications at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, noted that Trudeau was the first major party leader in Canada to use Instagram in 2015.

"People were using Twitter, but Instagram is more of an identity-centric, image-centric medium," she said.

Trudeau used those images to project a persona that was at once youthful and confident, sensitive and thoughtful: a leader worthy of respect, she said.

"These were his best years because people were rooting for him. He was also really popular. He was also able to reach out to the younger generation," Lalancette said. 

He was a self-proclaimed feminist, an optimist who promised "sunny ways." He presented himself as a family man, Lalancette noted, and said he valued reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples.

He also reached out beyond Canada's borders.

His "steamy" photo shoot for Vogue magazine with Sophie Grégoire Trudeau made waves internationally in December 2015. He graced the cover of Rolling Stone a couple years later. His likeness — though not his voice — appeared on "The Simpsons" in a 2019 episode that saw Lisa Simpson nurse a crush on him.

"There was a moment where he was really a supernova," said Alex Marland, a professor of political science at Acadia University. 

"Back here in Canada, we were getting all sorts of news stories that were talking about how he was being mobbed in the Philippines, or if he was going out to Switzerland, there were people there wanting to meet him."

Marland said Canadians had a sort of parasocial relationship with Trudeau at that time. He'd grown up in the public eye because of his father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, so people felt like they knew him. 

"They did not like anybody criticizing Justin Trudeau, because they saw him as almost a family member," he said.

But Marland said that started to change in 2018 when Trudeau and his family took a much-ridiculed trip to India. They were photographed, over and over again, wearing clothes more appropriate for a wedding than a state visit. 

"People started seeing it as: he's a bit of a phoney," he said. 

"And all of a sudden, now, for some people, they were able to move away from giving him the benefit of the doubt to realizing that instead of (being) authentic, he was actually manipulating them."

Politicians seldom go out on a high note, Marland said, but in Trudeau's case the highs were higher and the lows were lower. His image had become so big, Marland said, that when it didn't match up with reality, people noticed. 

"What was growing over time was the disconnect between promise and delivery, and that's a fundamental problem when you're dealing with a brand," he said.

"As a brand, Justin Trudeau was failing on a lot of promises because he was creating expectations and he was not fulfilling them." 

He was dogged by a litany of scandals, from the SNC-Lavalin affair that saw two female cabinet ministers — justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould and health minister Jane Philpott — resign, to the surfacing of old photos and video of Trudeau wearing black- and brownface. 

Trudeau didn't live up to his feminist, culturally sensitive promise.

Although Canadians re-elected Trudeau in 2019, he was knocked down to a minority government. The Liberals were unable to regain majority in 2021. 

Marland pointed to a famous photo of Trudeau flanked by his cabinet, which was the first in Canada to achieve gender parity, walking up to the governor general's residence in 2015 to be sworn in.

Compare that, he said, to the image of the prime minister standing alone at a lectern as he announced his resignation.

"That in itself captures what has happened," Marland said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Post temporarily laying off striking workers, union says

Canada Post temporarily laying off striking workers, union says
The union representing Canada Post workers says the Crown corporation has been laying off striking employees as the labour action by more than 55,000 workers approaches the two-week mark. In a notice to members posted Monday, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers called the layoffs a "scare tactic" and said it's looking into the situation.

Canada Post temporarily laying off striking workers, union says

Eliminating open-net fish farms in B.C. would cost taxpayers billions: report

Eliminating open-net fish farms in B.C. would cost taxpayers billions: report
The proposed federal ban on open net-pen salmon farms in British Columbia coastal waters will cost taxpayers billions and seriously impact Canada's economy, food security and Indigenous communities, says a report commissioned by the BC Salmon Farmers Association.

Eliminating open-net fish farms in B.C. would cost taxpayers billions: report

Liberal GST holiday expected to pass soon as government introduces solo bill

Liberal GST holiday expected to pass soon as government introduces solo bill
The Liberal government introduced a stand-alone bill to implement its proposed GST holiday Wednesday, hours after the NDP threatened it would not pass the legislation if it was linked to a $250 rebate for working Canadians. The bill would give people a two-month GST exemption on items like premade food at grocery stores, children's clothes, toys, some alcoholic beverages and other holiday season staples.

Liberal GST holiday expected to pass soon as government introduces solo bill

Significant snowfall for parts of BC

Significant snowfall for parts of BC
Environment Canada says a "series of upper disturbances combining with cold arctic air" will result in significant snowfall to parts of B-C's northern and central Interior. It says up to 25 centimetres of snow is expected in the region by tomorrow afternoon.

Significant snowfall for parts of BC

BC Place to be fenced off for Taylor Swift shows, with zone limited to ticket holders

BC Place to be fenced off for Taylor Swift shows, with zone limited to ticket holders
Vancouver officials say areas around BC Place stadium will be strictly limited to ticket holders for Taylor Swift's three Eras Tour shows that begin next week, as they announce preparations for what they say will be one of the biggest event weekends in the city's history. Police, city, stadium and transport officials say 160,000 fans have tickets for the shows on Dec. 6, 7 and 8, and up to 40 per cent are international travellers.

BC Place to be fenced off for Taylor Swift shows, with zone limited to ticket holders

Poilievre calls two-month GST break inflationary, says Tories will vote against it

Poilievre calls two-month GST break inflationary, says Tories will vote against it
The two-month measure applies to dozens of items commonly purchased over the holidays, including children's clothes and toys, video games and consoles, Christmas trees, restaurant and catered meals, wine, beer, candy and snacks. Poilievre, a vocal advocate for cutting taxes, said the GST break "isn't a tax cut."

Poilievre calls two-month GST break inflationary, says Tories will vote against it