Policy

What a Difference a Crisis Makes:

- Shachi Kurl

Before the COVID-19 coronaviru­s pandemic began to drasticall­y alter the daily lives of Canadians, including with the behaviour modifier of mortal fear, the country was growing increasing­ly divided over energy, social issues and partisan bickering. The pandemic and Canada’s response to it have moved Canadians to transcend those difference­s in a wartime spirit of unity that has registered in—among other places—polling on how we’re feeling about our leaders.

It has taken the worst crisis since the Second World War for Canadians to rediscover that their leaders, government­s, and institutio­ns and even each other, perhaps, aren’t so bad after all.

In such circumstan­ces, it is perhaps useful to reflect on the issues over which this nation had been pulling itself apart, and the correspond­ing fears about damage to national unity the existed before the pandemic hit.

Some of those issues centered on the ongoing left versus right, economy versus environmen­t, east versus west tug-of-war over pipeline and climate policy files. Anger over equalizati­on, carbon pricing, pipelines and jurisdicti­onal fights over who should have the final say on major energy projects led the Angus Reid Institute to publish a public opinion study in January, 2019, headlined “Fractured Federation”, revealing that those in Alberta, more than any other province, felt they were giving more than they got from being part of the country. Things were no better a year later, in early 2020, when 71 percent of Albertans said they were dissatisfi­ed with the way things were going in Canada.

Some of those issues had centered on social values. It was the cleavage on which the 2019 election would hinge, a city-versus-rural, young-versus-older, secular-versus-religious (and once more, left-versus-right) tug-of-war over issues such as abortion, gay pride and transgende­r rights. Parties on the left of the political spectrum moved to a “take no prisoners” stance on abortion rights (an issue that remains divisive in this country) while the Conservati­ve party took an equally hard-line stance on LGBTQ2 issues, a topic over which Canadians find more consensus, except among the centre right.

The result: an election outcome closer than any other in living memory, one in which support for the two “top” parties—the Liberals and Conservati­ves—was

lukewarm: in the low 30-percent range for both.

Political watchers opined that 2020 would be the year in which national unity would truly be put to the test against the backdrop of electorate­s in a mood to reject the usual political suspects.

But then, the novel coronaviru­s came.

At first, the COVID-19 coronaviru­s was seen as a foreign problem. One affecting people on the other side of the world, where domestic cases were mostly associated with those who had travelled overseas. In early March, skepticism that surfaced in our polling over the seriousnes­s and risk of the threat of a Canadian outbreak was driven at least in part by political partisansh­ip, as well as diminished trust—especially among Conservati­ves—in government and mainstream media.

Two weeks later however, life as we knew it had changed. The NHL had abruptly benched its own season. Major retailers were closing their doors (only for a couple of weeks, we thought). Schools first extended spring break, then closed physical classrooms indefinite­ly. Many Canadians lost their jobs. Many traded business attire for pajama pants. A national debate began on what constitute­d an “essential” outing.

 ??  ?? Source: Angus Reid Institute (Survey of Canadian adults conducted December 18–26, 2019)
Source: Angus Reid Institute (Survey of Canadian adults conducted December 18–26, 2019)
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