In Canada, Gender Politics Could Topple Trudeau
Unpacking the consequences of Trudeau’s gender policies on his political standing and Canada’s future.
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In Canada, the present minority government will, barring some extraordinary twist, hold power until the next federal election in Oct, 2025. It seems like an eternity for many fed-up Canadians, buoyed up by, but also made more impatient by, the Conservative Party of Canada’s 20-point lead over the Liberals in the polls, pointing to the strong possibility of a majority CPC government.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who came into office on a wave of public adulation for his “sunny ways,” good looks, and name recognition (he is the son of former Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau), only clings to power thanks to contractual support from a far-left, but cynically opportunistic New Democrat Party (NDP) that would otherwise enjoy the same trailing third-party status it has been stuck at forever.
The current government’s plunge in popularity can be attributed in significant part to revulsion from the government’s extreme policy progressivism on all fronts, but also to rapidly diminishing trust in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s personal once-Teflon brand, as scandals directly attached to his rotten judgment keep piling up.
Gender realists will be amongst the happiest Canadians to see the back of this shallow, arrogant man, who for nine years seems never to have given a moment’s thought to what the effects on children or women might be before ticking every policy box presented to him by gender ideologues.
Some background:
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