Will controversial photos hurt Trudeau's re-election chances?
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Old photos and a video of Canadian Prime Minister (and former drama
teacher) Justin Trudeau wearing costumes that included brown body and face paint
surfaced last week and quickly shot around the world. Trudeau was accused of
cultural and racial insensitivity, and there has been speculation that the
controversy might hurt Trudeau’s re-election chances ahead of an Oct. 21 vote.
I’ve talked to both American and Canadian friends about the Trudeau flap, and
the difference in the reactions spoke volumes. The American friends wanted to
see a political bloodbath, gleefully imagining that Trudeau would have to
resign. The Canadian friends were simply concerned about how the Trudeau photos
would make Canada look to the rest of the world.
“I’m surprised,” U.S. President Donald Trump said of the photos, “and I was more
surprised when I saw the number of times.”
Canadians, however, have grown accustomed to Trudeau’s dress-ups.
In 2010, before he became Liberal Party leader, Trudeau stirred controversy with
a Christmas card featuring his family dressed in matching coyote fur, which
outraged animal-rights activists. When Trudeau made an official visit to India
last year, he and his family repeatedly wore bright Indian-style attire that
looked borrowed from a Bollywood film studio’s costume department. The outfits
didn’t go over very well, with one former Indian official saying it was “all
just a bit much.”
Trudeau also took on the role (complete with costume) of real-life soldier
Talbot Mercer Papineau, who was killed in the Battle of Passchendaele during
World War I, for a CBC Television miniseries. About the only cultural events for
which Trudeau hasn’t dressed up are pride parades — unless you count his pink
shirts.
“The fact of the matter is that I’ve always — and you’ll know this — been more
enthusiastic about costumes than is sometimes appropriate,” Trudeau said during
his apology after the brownface photos emerged. “When I was in high school, I
dressed up at a talent show and sang ‘Day O’ (Harry Belafonte’s “Banana Boat
Song”) with makeup on.”
Regardless of how Trudeau’s costumes are judged, Canadians aren’t just going to
hand his adversaries a victory without evaluating where each party stands on
policy. Nor do Canadians take kindly to negative campaigning.
Conservative Party leader Andrew Scheer admitted to reporters that a member of
his campaign team had obtained the Trudeau brownface video from a source and
subsequently leaked it to the media. Scheer claims that his team gave the video
to the press “for verification.” Seriously? Taking a compromising photo of a
world leader to a journalist for an authenticity assessment is like bringing a
kitten to a great white shark for a cuteness assessment.
Attempting to derail the entire campaign by replacing debate about policy with
sensationalism is an insult to voters’ intelligence. Polls taken both before and
after the brownface fiasco show a statistical tie between the Liberals and
Conservatives, suggesting that the episode isn’t making much of a dent in
Canadians’ decision-making. Perhaps it would be different if they believed that
Trudeau’s actual policies were racist — but they aren’t. In fact, it’s difficult
to think of another Canadian prime minister (or another a world leader) who’s
gone as far out of his way as Trudeau has to virtue-signal in the interests of
promoting diversity and inclusion.
Trudeau’s political mandate won’t be judged on a few old, tasteless photos.
Rather, he’ll be largely be judged on how his diversity policies have impacted
Canada.
In 2017, Trudeau’s party introduced a plan to accept increasing numbers of
immigrants. Soon, migrants from developing nations who faced the prospect of
deportation from the United States were streaming across the U.S.-Canada border
at unofficial crossings in Quebec. The surge didn’t sit well with many residents
of that francophone province, who don’t like how the burden of Trudeau’s policy
affects Quebec’s language, culture and finances.
Trudeau’s policy of welcoming of Syrian refugees was praised by many on the
left, but only 5 percent of government-sponsored male refugees from Syria are
currently employed, according to a report. Meanwhile, the Trudeau government has
failed to adequately speak out against the kind of neoconservative
interventionist wars waged by its allies that have prompted so many migrants to
flee war-torn countries.
The federal campaign period is Canada is barely more than a month long. The
photo controversy has distracted from meaningful debate about government
policies, including those that have an impact on diversity and culture. The
Conservative Party should really be provoking a conversation about these matters
rather than donning the offensive costume of political dirty-tricksters.
COPYRIGHT 2019 RACHEL MARSDEN