The Mercury News

Truckers paralyzed Canada's capital. It could happen here

- By Doyle McManus Doyle McManus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

The pictures from Ottawa over the last two weeks have defied every American stereotype of Canadians. We think of our northern neighbors as incorrigib­ly polite, their politics as moderate and their capital city — when we consider it at all — as boring, the Sacramento of the north.

Suddenly, however, Ottawa has become the center of a global populist backlash against vaccine mandates and, more broadly, elitist liberal government­s.

About 500 truckers angry about new bordercros­sing rules between Canada and the United States have occupied the city's central core.

They've been reinforced by thousands of other protesters, some waving Trump banners, swastika flags and placards with decidedly impolite epithets aimed at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

For much of the last week, copycats blocked the most important land crossing between Canada and the United States, the Ambassador Bridge across the Detroit River, which normally carries almost onethird of the two countries' manufactur­ing trade. The effect on North America's supply chain was nearly instant; automotive factories from Ontario to Alabama cut production as they ran low on parts.

More copycat protests have sprung up from Australia to France, and U.S. groups say they are trying to organize a similar truck convoy from California to Washington.

The protesters' demands are often vague. But the common threads are clear: anti-vaccine militancy and general anger at government, a stubborn package of populist libertaria­nism.

“Most of the protesters in Ottawa are not truckers at all,” Martin Geoffroy, a scholar of Canadian extremist movements at Édouard-Montpetit College near Montreal, told me last week. “They include a collection of far-right movements which existed before the pandemic. All of them have one thing in common: They are opposed to the authoritie­s.”

Also, many of them admire former President Donald Trump.

“What we're seeing is a spillover of Trumpism into Canada,” he said. “We've seen Trump flags, QAnon flags, flags that say `Don't tread on me.' These are American symbols, not Canadian.”

The admiration runs both ways. “The Freedom Convoy is peacefully protesting the harsh policies of far left lunatic Justin Trudeau who has destroyed Canada with insane Covid mandates,” Trump said in a written statement. (In fact, Canada has weathered the pandemic with a death rate roughly one-third of ours thanks largely to its higher vaccinatio­n rate.)

On Fox News, Tucker Carlson called the convoys the “single most successful human rights protest in a generation” and suggested the time might be ripe for similar actions south of the border.

The protesters' claims to speak for the average Canadian, however, are belied by polls showing that the truckers' blockade was widely unpopular even before it began mucking with the supply chain.

In a survey by the Leger polling organizati­on, 65% of respondent­s called the demonstrat­ors a “small minority of Canadians who are thinking only about themselves.”

Only 32% said they supported the protesters' demands.

Canada's Conservati­ve Party has been moving rightward as well. Two weeks ago it dumped its last leader, Erin O'Toole, in part because his moderate tone was out of step with his party's populist wing.

His interim successor, a Manitoba populist named Candice Bergen (not the star of “Murphy Brown”), was once photograph­ed wearing a “Make America Great Again” cap. She embraced the truckers, hailing their “peaceful protest.”

But by the end of last week, Bergen, noticing that voters' patience was running out, executed a U-turn.

“The time has come down to take down the barricades,” she said Thursday. “The economy you want to see reopened is hurting.”

Trump, Carlson and other U.S. conservati­ves may be cheering for the truckers now. They should be careful what they wish for.

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