After Trucker Protest, Canada Grapples With a
Question: Was It a Blip, or Something Bigger?
The demonstrators were passionate, organized and
supported financially, but such spontaneous movements often have a tough time
converting their energy into real change.
Natalie
KitroeffIan Austen
By Natalie
Kitroeff and Ian Austen
Feb. 21,
2022, 3:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/21/world/americas/canada-protest.html
OTTAWA — A
cavalcade of big rigs rumbled into the Canadian capital, blocked major streets,
drew thousands of supporters, enraged residents and captured the attention of a
shocked nation for three weeks. Now they’re gone, leaving Canadians to grapple
with some high stakes questions about their country’s political future.
Was the
occupation an aberration, or was it the beginning of a more fundamental shift
in the country’s political landscape? Did their chaotic blockade alienate the
public so much that the movement has no shot at a future, or did it form the
base for a lasting political organization?
“There is a
worry, and it’s been expressed in all kinds of ways, that this protest movement
will become something much more significant and much more sustained,” said
Wesley Wark, a senior fellow at the Center for International Governance
Innovation, a Canadian public policy group. “It was given terrific oxygen to
spread its message.”
The moment
is uniquely tied to the pandemic: Protesters demanded an end to all government
pandemic measures. But it is also part of a broader trend.
Social
media was a driving force behind street protests of the past decade or so,
uniting multitudes in occupations from Zuccotti Park in New York to Gezi Park
in Istanbul. But research has shown that such movements often have a tough time
converting their energy into real change.
By Sunday
afternoon, streets in Ottawa that had been clogged with trucks, makeshift
canteens and noisy protesters were largely empty except for police vehicles. A
swath of downtown had been fenced off. A protester compound that had occupied a
baseball stadium’s parking lot had been cleared — though about two dozen heavy
trucks and a cluster of other vehicles reconvened about 100 kilometers outside
the city.
During
their three-week occupation, much about the protests alienated Canadians. At a
border blockade in Alberta, police seized a large cache of weapons and charged
four protesters with conspiring to murder police officers.
But
demonstrators also saw much of the disruption they caused as a tactical
victory.
One
contingent in Windsor, Ontario, blocked a key bridge between Canada and the
United States for a week, forcing auto plants to scale back production and
disrupting about $300 million a day in trade.
From the
beginning, they caught law enforcement flat-footed. Some truckers said in
interviews that they were surprised at being allowed to stay in the first
place, and the city’s police chief resigned in response to the public anger
over the sluggish pace at which the authorities moved to dislodge them.
The breakup
of the demonstration came after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has cast
himself as a champion of human rights, invoked an emergency measure that gave
the police the ability to seize the protesters’ vehicles and allowed banks to
freeze their accounts. Mr. Trudeau’s decision prompted legal action to quash
the order from the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, which called it
“unconstitutional.”
The leader
of the Conservative Party, Erin O’Toole, had tilted increasingly toward the
center, but was forced out and temporarily replaced by a full-throated
supporter of the protests. And Doug Ford, Ontario’s premier, lifted the proof
of vaccination requirement and capacity limits for businesses slightly earlier
than planned.
Neither
move was directly tied to the occupation — Mr. Ford explicitly said he was not
responding to protesters’ demands but to the public health trends — but both
were celebrated as wins by the occupiers.
Perhaps
most consequentially, under the eye of ubiquitous television cameras and
livestreaming cellphones, the protests dominated the airwaves for weeks and
generated conversation about coronavirus restrictions.
“The big
lesson in all of this is everybody’s learned that we’re not actually
powerless,” B.J. Dichter, an official spokesman for the convoy, said in an
online discussion among supporters last week. Much has “happened as a result of
all these people coming together,” he said.
But the
demonstrators haven’t actually channeled the energy built up over weeks into a
clear political force, experts said.
Maxime
Bernier, the leader of the People’s Party of Canada, a right wing group that
has no seats in Parliament, showed up to the protests — but he didn’t attract
much more attention than any other speaker.
And though
there were pockets of sympathy for the protesters’ frustration with pandemic
rules, the bulk of Canadians resented their tactics and wanted them to go home,
surveys show. In Ottawa, residents were angry that the authorities took so long
to act.
“This thing
was a truly fringe movement that got lucky, in my view, in terms of failures of
policing,” Mr. Wark said. “I think this has been an extraordinary moment and
flash in the pan.”
There were
elements of right wing extremism tied to the protests around the country, where
Confederate, QAnon and Trump flags had cropped up. Conspiracy theorists could be
found milling about Parliament, too: people who believed big Pharma created the
coronavirus in order to make money on vaccines or that QR codes allow the
government to police our thoughts.
But the
protests drew in thousands of people on some weekends, many of them just
frustrated Canadians who didn’t want to be forced to get a vaccine or were just
fed up with the pandemic and its restrictions. The majority of the more than $8
million donated to the truckers through GiveSendGo came from Canada, a data
leak showed.
In
interviews, trucker after trucker said this was his or her first protest.
Michael Johnson, 53, parked his fire-engine-red truck in front of Parliament
after his son suggested they drive in with the convoy. He stayed there until
the very end.
“When we
turned our headlights toward Ottawa, I don’t think any of us knew what we were
driving into,” Mr. Johnson said. “I didn’t realize how bad it was until I got
here.”
Mr. Johnson
never got vaccinated and didn’t have to — hauling scrap metal around northern
Ontario doesn’t require crossing the border.
And he said he recently became a supporter of the right-wing People’s
Party of Canada. But he believes the coronavirus is real and when people
knocked on the door of his cab to talk about conspiracy theories, he refused to
engage.
“That’s not
why I’m here,” he said. “It’s a distraction.”
Every ten
minutes or so, someone stopped by to drop off money, give him a hug, or thank
him.
Mr. Johnson
has heard stories of people who lost their jobs because they don’t want to get
vaccinated. His cab is plastered with appreciation letters from people who have
told him that the movement made them feel, for once, that they weren’t crazy or
alone.
“Telling
people you either get this or you lose your jobs or you can’t go to places —
it’s segregation,” Mr. Johnson said.
Carmen
Celestini, a postdoctoral fellow at the Disinformation Project at Simon Fraser
University in Burnaby, British Columbia, said that kind of protester, “the
genuine people who are anti-vaccine,” has been overlooked throughout the
occupation.
“Their
voices have been ignored in much of this,” Ms. Celestini said, adding that,
“because we keep shoving that underneath name-calling and not engaging, it’s
going to fester.”
Mr.
Johnson’s truck is the most valuable thing that he owns, and it is his
livelihood. The risk of losing it left him anxious. When the police started
closing in, his uncle and aunt begged him to go home.
“The
realization of what I might lose from all this,” he said, “that’s scary.” There
was a part of him that wanted the stakeout to just end. But he refused to pack
up early.
“I’m too
far in now,” he said, “If we show fear, everyone else will lose momentum.”
On
Saturday, police finally reached his door. A man walked up to shake his hand
through the window one more time. Mr. Johnson walked out with his hands in the
air, surrendering himself and his truck to the authorities. A crush of
supporters let out a cheer. “We love you,” several people yelled.
Mr. Johnson
was forced out of the protest along with everyone else gathered in front of
Parliament. But he vowed to keep fighting.
“Now,” he
said, “they’ve woken me up.”
Vjosa Isai
contributed reporting from Toronto and Sarah Maslin Nir from Ottawa.
A native of
Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto and currently lives in
Ottawa. He has reported for The Times about Canada for more than a decade. @ianrausten
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário