With just a week to go until the United States election and the polls somehow deadlocked between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, Canadians are left to wait and wonder. Will we be plunged back into the blender of chaos and calamity that coloured the first four years under Trump? Or will we get the conspiracy theories and rioting that followed his defeat in 2020? Barring a landslide victory for Kamala Harris — one that is still theoretically possible — these are the two alternative futures we face.
But even if that Harris landslide somehow materializes, we still have another problem on our hands: Trumpism has already crossed the border, and it’s spreading rapidly among Canada’s Conservative community. Witness the spike in vote-oriented conspiracy theories in the wake of British Columbia’s recent provincial election that sound an awful lot like the nonsense that ricocheted around the MAGA political ecosystem after the 2020 election.
It’s a striking contrast with BC’s 2017 election, one that produced an equally tight outcome but no real attempts to question the legitimacy of the province’s democratic process. As pollster Mario Canseco noted on social media, “I don’t recall any ‘the election was fraudulent’ #bcpoli tweets in 2013 (surprising result), 2017 (a tie) and 2020 (loads of mail-in ballots). Something that began in Washington, DC, on the night of Nov. 3, 2020, and culminated on Jan. 6, 2021, helps explain the difference.”
After all, the process of counting votes in BC hasn’t changed. As Vancouver family lawyer Don Wilson noted on social media, this year’s count is actually the fastest in 33 years. But that hasn’t stopped folks like National Post columnist Tristin Hopper, Freedom Convoy lawyer Eva Chipiuk or “Take Back Alberta” founder David Parker from raising doubts about the legitimacy of the process. “Regardless of your stance on whether the BC election was rigged,” Chipiuk said on social media, “it's evident that a significant crisis of trust in our institutions exists.”
The election wasn’t rigged, of course, and framing it as though it could have been is a giant tell. So too was the conspicuous silence here on the part of Conservative political leaders, whether that’s John Rustad (who, it should be noted, suggested earlier that the election rules were “rigged” in favour of the NDP) or Pierre Poilievre. On Monday evening Rustad finally broke his radio silence with a public statement that accepted the results and endorsed the work of Elections BC, only to undermine that a day later when he declined an opportunity to speak out more forcefully against the conspiracy theories being spread by some of his supporters about the election. "People have the right to say what they're going to say," he told reporters.
It’s not clear whether Rustad and Poilievre were afraid of alienating their own supporters or merely uninterested in correcting these obvious falsehoods, but their lack of courage will have consequences regardless of what’s behind it. As UBC political science lecturer Stewart Prest told CityNews, “our entire electoral process ultimately rests on our ability and our willingness to trust that those put in positions to oversee elections are carrying out their duties effectively.”
As we’ve seen in America, the erosion of that trust can happen faster than we’d like to believe. Look to Alberta, where the issue of electronic tabulators has now reached the level of official government policy. In its recent package of “democratic” reforms, ones that include introducing political parties at the municipal level and giving the province the ability to remove elected councilors and mayors, the UCP government also banned the use of electronic tabulators across the province. As the Calgary Herald’s Rob Breakenridge noted, “there have been no reported issues with these tabulators. There will be costs resulting from banning them. As far as the facts are concerned, it’s all downside and no upside.”
Indeed, all the evidence suggests that hand-counting ballots is slower, more inefficient and more costly than using machines. As the Associated Press noted in a recent story, a New Hampshire study showed that poll workers who counted hand ballots were off by eight per cent compared to just a 0.5 per cent error rate for machine counting. “Human beings are really bad at tedious things, and counting ballots is among the most tedious things we could do,” MIT political science professor Charles Stewart said. “Computers are very good at tedious things. They can count very quickly and very accurately.”
But Premier Danielle Smith’s feelings — and, more importantly, those of the members who will vote on her leadership later this week — don’t care about these facts. That’s why her proposed changes to the Alberta Bill of Rights will apparently include “the freedom to democratically elect and recall legislators by voting through secret paper ballots to be manually hand counted.”
Yes, most of this noise is happening on Twitter/X, a social media platform that has been transformed from a digital public square into a digital sewer. And yes, the people actively trying to undermine trust in our elections and the people who administer them are a tiny minority of the overall public. But as we’ve seen in both America and Alberta (and with all necessary apologies to Margaret Mead), we should never underestimate the power of a small group of committed people — or their willingness to play with fire if it helps them rule over the ashes.
This column was updated to include BC Conservative leader John Rustad's statement on Tuesday.
Comments
There is so much misinformation out there on social media, it makes you wonder why people even bother to use these platforms. The MAGA or our Freedumb crowd here in Canada, just makes your head spin with their twisted views of freedom and what is wrong with this country.
To make things worse, you have Pierre "Snake oil salesman" Poilievre playing the same game with disinformation. It seems like Republicans, Conservatives can't win elections without outright lies and disinformation. When challenged about the same, they just side-step question & move on to other nonsense. If you don't agree with these people, they just toss insults or call you a communist. With the latter, these folks have ZERO clue what a communist is, having been brainwashed by misinformation on social media.
Some time ago, I abandoned social media which went through stages of a friendly media platform years ago, to a dumpster fire for a period and more recently a sewer, that smells just as bad.
Agreed, and in real life we have both Trump and Poilievre accusing their opponents and their fathers of being Marxists.
Of course, both also accuse their opponents of being "radical" on countless issues.
And at bare minimum, sympathetic to or receiving help from "communists".
The undermining of what is left of the media as being unreliable as a source of information is also a part of their strategy ("fake news" and defund the CBC, attack CTV)
Better, both men infer, to get your information and opinions straight from their own (Pierre or Donald) mouths, which can barely say anything without misinforming, lying, or throwing in a conspiracy theory.
Conservatives can't win elections without outright lies and disinformation--very true. This is because the actual right wing agenda is fundamentally bad for most people. In the end, the point of right wing thought is that some people should be a lot more equal than others, that wealth should be stratified with the majority having very little so the small minority can be filthy stinking rich (and powerful). All the lies, all the "culture" stuff, all the scapegoating whoever looks defenseless yadda yadda yadda, is not the POINT of conservatism, it's the excuse, the lure, the shiny distraction. They lie because they can't very well run on their actual objectives.
But the big question is, so they need lies to win--but why are lies enough for them to win? How do they get a big enough pulpit that so many people start believing all this transparent bullshit? And there are two answers. The first is money--they are serving the agenda of money, so they get given money with which to serve that agenda. The right buys newspapers, bots on social media, PR "think tanks", and on and on. So they get to talk lots and loud. We need massive media reforms to break the rule of money over information.
The second is the failure or complicity of the centre, whose governance hardly ever does real people much noticeable good. Sure, the right makes things worser faster, but the centre sometimes also makes things worse and rarely makes them any better, and when they do it's usually not fast enough for anyone to notice the impact while they're in office. People are left subjectively with an experience of gradual decline in their quality of life no matter who's in office, with little direct guide as to just who's responsible for it. So lots of them listen to whoever's loudest . . . at which point, see my comment about money.
The only politics which can stop the lying far right is a bold politics that faces the problems with the status quo and is willing to do big things to make people's lives noticeably, materially better and do it fast enough that you see it in one term of office. That takes money, commitment, and a willingness to steamroll obstacles and ignore the right wing press calling you a communist.
It is important that school curricula teach about the democratic process and the risks that exist, and what needs to be done to maintain it. What is happening in the USA with disinformation and outright lies is frightening, and we are not immune. Voters need to have critical thinking skills.
" ...the polls somehow deadlocked between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump."
The most respected A+ polls with the highest number of respondents and the greatest historical accuracy when compared to the actual election results show Harris with a lead between four and five percent nationally, and in the lead in several swing states. A poll with the largest number of respondents in US political history (CEC with ~48,700) judt rset Harris at 4% more than Trump.
"...just released..."
Journos who did the research to see what's behind the polls found that biased Republican pollsters flooded the roster of national polls to purposely skew the average of all polls toward a "deadlock" when in fact Harris leads in true averages. Trump polls are quick and numerous, have very low numbers of respondents and ask leading questions. Internal Republican polling is said to have set GOP party organizers into panic mode.
Moreover, the last Trump rally (NYC) on Sunday was nothing less than the most racist Trump gathering ever which focused particularly nastily on Puerto Ricans. Within 24 hours America's Hispanics were angered en masse and are in a position to move the dial even more toward Harris, who has indicated nothing less than respect for Puerto Rico. There are nearly 500,000 Puerto Ricans in Pennsylvania alone. They're mad and are not going to take it any more.
Please take polling averages with a big grain of salt, and seek out only the ones with the highest scientific standards and historical accuracy.
I am predicting Kamala Harris will win the US election next week. It stands to reason that Trumpeters will wail about "stealing" the election when in fact that it is they who have prepositioned themselves as vote counters to do just that. Trump and House speaker Mike Johnson are rumoured to have a secret deal prepared where the House sends some vote results back to certain states -- red states, no doubt -- for "recounts." Biden needs to be prepared to anticipate and immediately counter this action. All this to say that the only way Trump will win is through gerrymandering, disenfranching selected districts and fraud. It won't work.
Let's say the high standard polls are correct and Harris wins. Let's also acknowledge the mounting numbers of very motivated women and newly registered young voters that push the Democrats to win both houses of Congress, which will place a Harris legislative agenda into a pretty much untouchable position for at least two years, until the midterm elections.
Then let's say all the election delays on Trump's trials and sentencing hearings are removed and he's wearing orange coveralls to match his spray on tan soon enough.
With their focus of worship locked up, what will the Canadian version -- MAGA Lite -- do? How will Poilievre act as a potential PM with a smart, very powerful woman leading the nation next door with a moderately progressive agenda? Look at the success of Biden's IRA policy, for example.
The Canadian MAGA party does not have a policy platform in the open yet. How will it change to meet a Harris agenda? The promotion of carbon fuels will run head on into an insidiously decarbonizing world. Wokeism and radical left narratives will collide with a brick wall. Conspiracies will be marginalized with the Conspirator in Chief in jail, perhaps longer than any attempt to make him into a hero.
I really don't think Poilievre and his band of conspirators who stole all their ideas from the GOP are up to the challenge of composing an original set of ideas into a policy format that does Canadians any good.
Dream on!
Appreciated your take on polls, but the psychology on conspiricy believers implies that they will double down rather than drift away. So Trump as martyr will just fuel the fire.
Of course they'll double down. MAGA is a religion, a cult with a core number of true believers.
But what counts is cold, hard numbers, not faith or anger. That would be bodies in polling booths. Trump has his core, but the moderate margins are leaking toward Harris in the form of women, youth and freshly PO'd minorities.