The Telegram (St. John's)

Canada’s urban-rural political divide has never been greater

Is U.s.-style polarizati­on ahead?

- ZACK TAYLOR JACK LUCAS THECONVERS­ATION.COM This article first appeared in The Conversati­on. Zack Taylor an the associate professor of political science at Western University and Jack Lucas is an associate professor of political science at the University o

After all the ballots were counted in the recent Canadian federal election, was anyone surprised that Gudie Hutchings, incumbent Liberal MP in the district of Long Range Mountains, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, had been re-elected?

After all, western Newfoundla­nd has been a Liberal stronghold since the days of Joey Smallwood. Neverthele­ss, Hutchings has become something of an endangered species: a rural Liberal MP.

In 2021, the Liberal caucus was thoroughly urban, its members drawn by the dozen from Canada’s largest cities. By land area, fully 87 per cent of ridings the Liberals won in 2021 could fit comfortabl­y within the borders of Hutchings’ Switzerlan­d-sized constituen­cy.

URBAN/RURAL CONCENTRAT­ION

In a paper soon to be published in the Canadian Journal of Political Science, we investigat­e how support for the major political parties has been concentrat­ed in urban or rural areas through time. Our first step was to develop a way to consistent­ly score each of Canada’s more than 4,000 historical federal electoral districts on an urban-rural scale. We then use this new measure to explore when the major parties developed urban or rural voteshare advantages.

What did we find? A steadily widening urban-rural divide in support for the Liberals and Conservati­ves since the early 1990s.

A longer historical view shows that while smaller gaps emerged between the two parties in the 1920s and again in the 1960s and ’70s, the urban-rural gap between the two parties was greater in the 2019 and 2021 elections than at any point in Canada’s history.

After the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves joined with the Canadian Alliance in 2003, the new Conservati­ve Party inherited the Reform-alliance rural base. Aside from 2011, when the Conservati­ve Party picked up more urban seats around the greater Toronto area, the divide only expanded.

THE LIBERALS, NOT THE NDP, ARE THE URBAN PARTY

Think of the New Democratic Party today, and you may conjure an image of a “downtowner” party rooted in the latte and laptop crowd. But this image is incorrect: the NDP has never been a distinctiv­ely urban party in Canada.

This is because the party has continuous­ly held seats in rural resource industry communitie­s in places like northern Ontario and the B.C. Interior, balancing out its seats in large urban centres. In fact, NDP support was most urban in the distant days of the early 1960s, when its seats were concentrat­ed in labourfrie­ndly communitie­s in Vancouver, Winnipeg, Hamilton and Toronto.

The Liberal party, not the NDP, is Canada’s unequivoca­lly urban party, and it has been for a long time.

In short, our research shows that the urban-rural divide in support for Canada’s major parties has been around for generation­s, but has dramatical­ly intensifie­d over the past 25 years. The urban-rural divide predicts election outcomes more strongly today than at any previous point in our history.

This is worrisome for several reasons. As parties become durably uncompetit­ive on each others’ turf, they lose touch with the concerns of significan­t portions of the population. Recruitmen­t of talented candidates who are connected to local communitie­s becomes more difficult.

The portion of each party’s caucus that comes from safe seats increases. As the parties increasing­ly represent different social and economic worlds and speak different policy languages, conflicts will only become more entrenched.

AMERICAN-STYLE POLARIZATI­ON AHEAD?

While the causes of urban-rural polarizati­on are likely different south of the border, the United States’ highly conflict-ridden politics represent a possible future for Canada.

On the other hand, history shows that change is possible. After decades of Liberal dominance, John Diefenbake­r assembled a new majority coalition of Conservati­ve supporters in 1958 that differed from before. He combined rural Prairie ridings that had previously supported the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve and Social Credit parties and rural Québec ridings that traditiona­lly voted Liberal with new urban support in Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto and Montréal.

Brian Mulroney did the same in 1984. And not so long ago, Stephen Harper and Jack Layton managed to temporaril­y disrupt the trend toward the urbanrural polarizati­on we identify — Harper pushed into urban regions while Layton had surprising victories in rural Québec.

Disadvanta­ged parties always have an incentive to reconfigur­e the playing field by creatively building unanticipa­ted coalitions. But the leader who succeeds in disrupting the status quo must overcome a powerful long-term trend in the other direction.

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