The US and UK had 'trigger events' that coalesced the new Right in a way that Canada is yet to experience. In the US, the rise of Trump is the obvious turning point. He came out on a platform of social conservatism, without the appalling chamber-of-commerce baggage that weighed the US right down for so long. I'm no communist, but "what's good for big corporations is good for the country" needed dealing with, along with that faggot Paul Ryan.
The UK had Brexit, which struck at the heart of the globalist experiment. The old battle lines were completely redrawn around attitudes to the EU. Tories, whose grassroots were always a lot more traditionalist/nationalist than the party, split with their elite. Labour lost their working-class base, decisively, to the Brexiteers. I'm still not fully sold on Johnson, as he seems to be appeasing the left far more than he should be (if they don't like it, why don't they try winning a crushing majority?), but the Brexit Party's show of strength when the main parties were vacillating, and UKIP's meteoric rise beforehand, will still have them on notice.
Canada hasn't yet been put to such a question. Trudy is certainly aggravating, but even his constant ethical breaches and dictatorial rulings aren't the "black swan" events that Brexit or Trump were.
The US and UK had 'trigger events' that coalesced the new Right in a way that Canada is yet to experience. In the US, the rise of Trump is the obvious turning point. He came out on a platform of social conservatism, without the appalling chamber-of-commerce baggage that weighed the US right down for so long. I'm no communist, but "what's good for big corporations is good for the country" needed dealing with, along with that faggot Paul Ryan.
The UK had Brexit, which struck at the heart of the globalist experiment. The old battle lines were completely redrawn around attitudes to the EU. Tories, whose grassroots were always a lot more traditionalist/nationalist than the party, split with their elite. Labour lost their working-class base, decisively, to the Brexiteers. I'm still not fully sold on Johnson, as he seems to be appeasing the left far more than he should be (if they don't like it, why don't they try winning a crushing majority?), but the Brexit Party's show of strength when the main parties were vacillating, and UKIP's meteoric rise beforehand, will still have them on notice.
Canada hasn't yet been put to such a question. Trudy is certainly aggravating, but even his constant ethical breaches and dictatorial rulings aren't the "black swan" events that Brexit or Trump were.