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Saturday November 9 2024

November 9, 2024 by Graeme MacKay

While both Trump and Poilievre use populist slogans and insults to galvanize supporters, Poilievre has thus far avoided Trump’s more extreme policies, opting to focus his populist messaging on economic concerns.

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Saturday November 9 2024

The Trump-Poilievre Paradox – Rhetoric vs. Reality in Canadian Conservatism

Trump's outlandish proposal to redirect Canadian water to California, though absurd, serves as a reminder of the risks posed by American political influence seeping into Canadian discourse, especially when conservative politicians flirt with populist rhetoric.

September 20, 2024

Comparing Pierre Poilievre to Donald Trump has become a favoured theme in Canadian political discourse. For partisan critics, it’s an easy play: conjuring images of Trump evokes associations with divisive rhetoric, populist slogans, and even authoritarian tendencies. But Poilievre, despite a shared knack for populist sloganeering and a confrontational style, remains distinct from Trump in meaningful ways. With Trump’s recent victory drawing renewed scrutiny to his influence on conservative politics worldwide, the question looms: how close will Poilievre align with Trump’s policies, and where will he resist?

Both leaders have indeed tapped into a deep well of frustration among working-class voters. Trump, with his “Make America Great Again” mantra, speaks to a nostalgic longing for a time when American manufacturing and middle-class prosperity seemed more attainable. Poilievre’s echo of this approach, encapsulated in the phrase “Axe the Tax,” is a rallying cry for Canadians feeling the pinch of inflation, rising housing costs, and stagnant wages. Poilievre has also sharpened his rhetoric with personal barbs — branding Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “Just-inflation” and NDP leader Jagmeet Singh as “Sell-out Singh” — signalling a shift in tone not typically associated with Canadian conservatism.

Essay: Canada’s polite Trumpism 

Justin Trudeau's attempt to borrow Kamala Harris's optimism and style in the current political climate is unlikely to resonate with Canadians, who are increasingly disillusioned with his leadership and the state of the nation.

September 4, 2024

Yet for all the parallels in style, there are substantial policy distinctions between the two. Trump’s appeal to his base has often been accompanied by polarizing stances, such as his hardline approach to immigration and his embrace of protectionist trade policies. These policies tapped into a strand of nationalism and nativism that has, so far, found limited resonance in Canada’s broader political landscape. Poilievre, on the other hand, has focused his populist appeal more narrowly on economic issues, particularly around affordability and cost of living. His promises to repeal the carbon tax and address the housing crisis are aimed at the specific economic anxieties of Canadians, rather than broader cultural divisions.

Poilievre’s support of the working-class “freedom” movement, especially during the trucker convoy protests, may be as close as he gets to the culture war themes that underpin much of Trump’s base. While Poilievre openly criticized Trudeau’s handling of the protest, siding with workers who felt ignored by Ottawa, he has been cautious not to echo Trump’s more overt attacks on institutions like the media or judiciary. This restraint signals a departure from Trump’s relentless strategy of painting himself as a political outsider fighting a “deep state” that seeks to undermine him. Instead, Poilievre has framed himself as a necessary disruptor within the bounds of Canada’s parliamentary norms.

Opinion: No, Pierre Poilievre is not Donald Trump

Both Joe Biden and Justin Trudeau are contending with declining public support, faced with doubts about their leadership abilities and growing concerns regarding their electability and potential successors within their parties.

November 9, 2023

The challenge for Poilievre now is to balance his populist, anti-elite appeal with a more inclusive vision for a diverse Canada. He has made overtures to immigrant communities, refraining from nativist rhetoric and positioning himself as a champion for those who feel “left behind” by Liberal policies. Yet critics argue that his anti-tax, pro-business policies may ultimately benefit the wealthy more than the working-class Canadians he’s courting. Poilievre, like Trump, risks alienating moderate voters if his slogans feel like hollow gestures to those seeking real solutions.

In navigating this path, Poilievre may ultimately use Trump’s example as a cautionary tale rather than a roadmap. Trump’s second victory, driven by working-class disillusionment, reminds conservatives worldwide of the power of populist rhetoric. But in a country as diverse as Canada, with a political culture less prone to polarization, a hardline Trumpian approach is likely a losing formula. Poilievre’s brand of conservatism may flirt with some of Trump’s tactics, but his policy choices suggest a more tempered form of populism that resists Trump’s most divisive instincts.

Opinion: Trump won the working-class vote and Poilievre’s Conservatives are well on the way to doing just that too

September 9, 2023

While Canada’s political landscape evolves, Poilievre faces a choice: adopt a broad, solutions-oriented populism, or lean further into the fiery style that Trump has perfected south of the border. For now, he seems intent on cherry-picking Trump’s rhetorical strategies, without adopting policies that would alienate the moderates who hold the balance of power in Canadian elections. Whether this will resonate with Canadian voters — or eventually backfire — will shape the future of Canada’s Conservative Party and its place in the country’s political spectrum.


 

For a Deep Dive into what this cartoon represents along with the other cartoons drawn in the past week and the earlier years of Trump have a listen to this convincing, though admittedly overly fawning podcast featuring two robot humans. 

For a written piece, head on over to “The Graeme Gallery” at SubStack, and if you haven’t already done so, please subscribe!

Post Election Blues

When the Elephant Stirs: When they go red, we go blue

 

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2024-20, axe the tax, branding, Canada, Donald Trump, election, merchandise, Pierre Poilievre, podcast, rhetoric, Substack, USA

Magnificent gift ideas for the Gift Giving Season

November 24, 2022 by Graeme MacKay

A portal to 300 unique designs and 100% originality. Great gift ideas for your history loving loved ones. Great conversation pieces for the never-ending discussion, debate, and review of the personalities and events of the past. Thousands upon thousands of these designs have been sold around the world. Order early to ensure they arrive before the busy gift giving season! Double-click on the images below:

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A large selection is available in a number of sizes from basic photographic prints, to art prints, framed prints, printed on canvas, and even on metal  and now, JIGSAW PUZZLES. Most images are available on a wide range of products including clocks, socks, face masks, buttons, magnets, coasters, bathmats, stickers, postcards, spiral notebooks, hardcover journals, greeting cards, posters, smart phone covers, cups, travel mugs, water bottles, tote bags, drawstring bags, studio pouches, t-shirts for him, fitted scooped t-shirts for her, graphic t-shirts, kids clothes, aprons, and throw pillows.

Posted in: Redbubble Tagged: 2022-40, boutique, christmas, gift ideas, gifts, history, history buff, mackaycartoons, merchandise, Redbubble

Wednesday June 30, 2021

July 7, 2021 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Wednesday June 30, 2021

Make Canada Day a time for reflection

By almost any standard, Canada can be judged one of the world’s best countries. Yet its riches, rewards and life-changing opportunities are not enjoyed equally by all who inhabit this land.

June 25, 2021

By almost any estimation, Canada’s history is filled with rousing stories of courage, vision and achievement. Yet there remains a long and shameful record of past injustices — many of which have yet to be set right.

Most notably, evidence of the glaring wrongs done to the people who first called this place home is now out in full public view as never before. As shocking as the recent discoveries of almost 1,000 unmarked gravesites at former First Nations residential schools in British Columbia and Saskatchewan have been, they have also provided one more necessary jolt to this nation’s collective conscience.

All these contradictions and paradoxes explain why it is so difficult for people to know how to mark Canada’s 154th birthday on Thursday. Do we wave the flag or lower it to half-mast? More than a year into a devastating pandemic and just as the arrival of another summer offers glimmers of respite, many Canadians ache for something to celebrate, something like the festive national holiday they’ve cherished in years past.

June 2, 2021

Yet Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has wisely called for this July 1st to be a more sober affair. Having reached a similar conclusion, many communities across the country have cancelled their traditional Canada Day festivities.

This is not the same as cancelling Canada Day itself, however, and no one is seriously recommending such a move that would, even for this one, fraught year alone, deny the country its nationwide holiday. But let’s also agree that after the discoveries of the graves of so many First Nations children, many Indigenous people would understandably consider the traditional celebrations with their parades and fireworks to be completely tone-deaf. 

We do not anticipate a clear national consensus on the matter of July 1, 2021. Whatever people do or don’t do this Canada Day, we would only urge everyone to pause and reflect upon what Canada is, how we got here and what remains for us to do — together.

There are abundant national treasures for which we can all give thanks. Judged by our national living standard, our health care and education systems and by the enviable rights and freedoms we enjoy, it is easy to see why this is so. The land itself, in all its staggering beauty and enormity stretching across a continent, lies waiting for new generations to explore. No wonder hundreds of thousands of people from around the world arrive eagerly each year to start a new life with this goal in mind: becoming new Canadians. And how wonderful it is that they do.

June 26, 2018

But none of this can or should drown out the voices of the Indigenous people who knew and loved this land for millennia. They are reminding us daily of what we need to regret, lament and correct. For this to happen, the Trudeau government must move from reflection to taking the action it has promised for years. It continues to ignore far too many of the recommendations from the 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission. 

The recent passage through Parliament of new legislation, Bill C-15, could bring overdue, transformative change by codifying with greater meaning than ever before the rights of Indigenous people to their land and self-government. But an even greater commitment to learn and change must be there, not just for our federal leaders but for all of us.

When that happens, even those who feel unable to celebrate the creation of Canada 154 years ago may be able to support something different: the creating of a new Canada today. (Hamilton Spectator Editorial) 

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2021-24, Canada, Canada Day, July 1, march, merchandise, patriotism, residential schools, t-shirts, truth and reconciliation, vender

Statues… and Prime Ministers, Presidents and Monarchs

August 10, 2020 by Graeme MacKay

(Graeme is currently enjoying a Summertime respite from his usual duties drawing editorial cartoons. In the meantime, please enjoy this illustration highlight of things on offer for purchase through his Redbubble online shop. Graeme’s daily satire returns on September 1, 2020.)

June 12, 2020

Statues are getting pulled down on past leaders because the bronze cast honour bestowed upon them are based on long ago glorification among long dead elites, whose decisions and actions are offensive to modern day sensibilities. Those dead elites aren’t around anymore to keep their idols polished, nor the narratives about them sanitized.  One might argue our ancestors and their leaders had thoughts and outlooks antithetical to our own, and it’s important to know the good AND the bad about them.

Sir John A. button

Canada’s Prime Minister gets acclaim and respect for his role in the formation of the nation, yet Sir John A. Macdonald‘s government also enacted a racist head tax to prevent Chinese people from entering after the completion of the CPR, as in the much celebrated “iron road runnin’ from the sea to the sea“. This after 17,000 labourers from China were brought in to accomplish Macdonald’s dream of a cross country railway. 

Jeffersonian Clock

A great Founding Father, the third President of the United States, Thomas Jefferson, gets acclaim for being the principal architect of the Declaration of Independence and penned the statement “all men are created equal”. This, despite owning 600 African slaves over his lifetime as a wealthy landowner.

King John Magnet

The Magna Carta is a royal charter of rights sealed with the stamp of approval by England’s King John in 1215. To this day it’s a celebrated omnibus act that brought about many reforms including guaranteed access to swift justice and the trial by jury system. King John himself was a man of dubious character, with many mistresses, illegitimate children, and not a lot of morals. His accepting of the Great Charter was essentially a gesture to quell rebellion from barons who were sick and tired of his reckless behaviour, incompetence, and disastrous military conquests.

Interpretations of historical figures change with every generation with broader cross sections of cultures increasingly deliberating on legacies from the past. Taking down statues does not erase history but it does destroy the blind glorification aspect of figures from our past. Taking down statues in public squares removes insult to injury aspect of glorification that has shown to continue to this day. 

The dictator magnet

Political power is something I’ve always held a great interest in observing. Whether it’s hereditary, oligarchy, or democracy, to view how the cream rises to the top is a very fascinating thing indeed.

I grew up in Canada, and when I was young and well aware that we had a Prime Minister and a Queen representing the highest offices in the nation, it was what I saw south of the border that I realized the power and influence of Presidents went global in significance. From the chronologies of humble beginnings, the pursuits of power, the victories, the challenges, the familiar trappings of office, the mystiques, and the legacies defining a period of time on this planet’s history, it made me wonder what it took to become President of the United States.

The Presidential placemat available on 70+ products

I embarked on learning about the Presidents, courtesy of my family’s World Book Encyclopedia, which had wonderful profiles of every one of them complete with full page portraits. It was my introduction to the familiar placemat style of chart showing each U.S. President, which I recall spanned from George Washington to James E. Carter. Every night before dinner I’d flip through pages, and commit all their names to memory.

Alas, not being American made me unqualified to ever hold that position. So, I looked closer to home and studied Canada’s Prime Ministers. That naturally led to an interest in history, and politics, which paved the way to university life in the nation’s capital, and finally, editorial cartooning.

Placemat Prime Ministers on a pillow & available on 70+ products

In 2014, I embarked on an experiment to cater to a niche audience interested in Canadian Prime Ministers. Fortunately, I live in a young country with half the number of leaders compared to the United States. My drawings have seen some nice sales, with my most popular drawing being the rather obscure and short lived in-between Prime Minister, Sir Charles Tupper. Perhaps people are enamoured by his impressive sideburn chops!

Full figured Presidents

My caricatures of Presidents have seen a bigger number of sales since posting them back in 2015. Based on sales, the earlier Presidents enjoy greater popularity than the newer ones.  George Washington, John Quincy Adams and Theodore Roosevelt are among the most popular. The President whose caricature has garnered the most sales is Lyndon Johnson. Out the blue I’ll see an order made for a child’s sized t-shirt with a full bodied caricature of, say, Chester A. Arthur, and wonder what the story is behind that sort of purchase (a man, by the way, who arguably possessed the most handsome mutton chops of all Presidents.)


My latest series is the Kings and Queens of England. Another fascination I have for the history that the monarchy is steeped in, which I’ll have more to say in the next entry.

My caricatures on products are designed to stir a bit of fun, interest, and reflection on the pursuit of history knowledge. Whether they’re on t-shirts, or socks, cups or coasters, they’re a little reminder of the interesting characters who’ve shaped history. If you love history, or know someone who does, these are great ways to express that passion.

Just remember, unlike a statue, you can toss a t-shirt in the laundry basket, rather than roll it into a nearby harbour.

 

 

 

Posted in: Redbubble Tagged: boutique, history, King, merch, merchandise, President, Prime Minister, queen, Redbubble

Saturday December 19, 2015

December 18, 2015 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator Ð Saturday December 19, 2015 Province trying to prevent raccoon rabies epidemic Ministry of Natural Resources officials are awaiting test results from dozens of dead and sick raccoons picked up over the past couple of weeks, to try to get a handle on the severity of a rabies outbreak in the Hamilton area. There are five confirmed cases. One in the lower city of Stoney Creek, three on the Mountain and one in Cayuga. But the results from more than 35 samples more recently acquired Ñ and undergoing testing Ñ will help determine whether a raccoon rabies epidemic in New York state has gained a foothold into Ontario. The samples come mostly from Animal Services in Hamilton, which routinely picks up dead, injured and sick animals, including raccoons. We're all hopeful the outbreak in the Hamilton area will extinguish itself over the next several months. Chris Davies Ministry of Natural Resources "We are in the exploratory stage right now," said Chris Davies, the Ministry of Natural Resources' manager of wildlife research. "We are trying to figure out how large the geographic extent of the current cases is," he said. The samples, from brain tissue in the deceased animals, go through two testing regiments. There's a quick test that creates a short list of potential positive results. And then there is a more costly and elaborate procedure by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency that roots out the false positive results of the first test. While the testing is being done, the ministry has been blitzing the Hamilton area with tens of thousands of raccoon rabies vaccine baits in hopes of containing a spread of the disease. The rabies strain known as the South Atlantic/Florida strain has been moving northward from Florida over the past several decades. It hit New York state 25 years ago, leading to an epidemic there. (Source: Hamilton Spectator) http://www.thespec.com/news-story/6197963-province-trying-to-preve

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Saturday December 19, 2015

Province trying to prevent raccoon rabies epidemic

Ministry of Natural Resources officials are awaiting test results from dozens of dead and sick raccoons picked up over the past couple of weeks, to try to get a handle on the severity of a rabies outbreak in the Hamilton area.

There are five confirmed cases. One in the lower city of Stoney Creek, three on the Mountain and one in Cayuga.

But the results from more than 35 samples more recently acquired — and undergoing testing — will help determine whether a raccoon rabies epidemic in New York state has gained a foothold into Ontario.

The samples come mostly from Animal Services in Hamilton, which routinely picks up dead, injured and sick animals, including raccoons.

We’re all hopeful the outbreak in the Hamilton area will extinguish itself over the next several months.

“We are in the exploratory stage right now,” said Chris Davies, the Ministry of Natural Resources’ manager of wildlife research.

“We are trying to figure out how large the geographic extent of the current cases is,” he said.

The samples, from brain tissue in the deceased animals, go through two testing regiments. There’s a quick test that creates a short list of potential positive results. And then there is a more costly and elaborate procedure by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency that roots out the false positive results of the first test. While the testing is being done, the ministry has been blitzing the Hamilton area with tens of thousands of raccoon rabies vaccine baits in hopes of containing a spread of the disease.

The rabies strain known as the South Atlantic/Florida strain has been moving northward from Florida over the past several decades.

It hit New York state 25 years ago, leading to an epidemic there. (Source: Hamilton Spectator)

 

Posted in: Hamilton Tagged: Alvin, brand, chipmunk, chipmunks, franchise, Hamilton, merchandise, movie, rabies, raccoon

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