4.6 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 5 March 2022
⏱️ 46 minutes
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For nearly a month a convoy of truckers in Canada captivated the nation by raucous but largely peaceful protesting with parked trucks in downtown Ottawa. To the surprise of the government, public opinion was mixed over the convoy's appearance. The truckers opposed the severe regime of Covid restrictions and mandates that the Canadian federal government had imposed on the population. The long-distance truckers stridently rejected the vaccination requirement, among other burdens placed on their daily work. After weeks spent parked in Ottawa, adjacent to the Canadian Parliament, the Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, imposed the Emergencies Act to bring the Freedom Convoy to an end. In this manner, Trudeau used a law meant for true situations of national security and applied it expansively and without factual justification to a civil protest. Banks froze the accounts of anyone suspected of supporting the protests. The truckers were dispersed in short order. In acting outside the bounds of law, the Canadian government may have created a new moment in Canadian politics. In opposing one of the strictest Covid regimes in western democracies, the Freedom Convoy seems to have sparked an end to much of Canada's worst Covid policies.
But what is the real legacy of the Freedom Convoy? Joanna Baron, a lawyer in Canada and Executive Director of the the Canadian Constitution Foundation, is on the legal front lines in Canada and joins us to discuss this question. She observes that "we're going to see an injection of populism into Canadian politics going forward."
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to a bonus edition of the Daily Signal Podcast. |
0:09.7 | I'm Richard Brunch, senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation. |
0:13.3 | Today I'm interviewing Joanna Barron, Executive Director of the Canadian Constitution Foundation |
0:18.9 | about the legacy of the Freedom Convoy in Canada. |
0:35.3 | Today we're joined by Joanna Barron from Toronto. |
0:39.1 | She is a lawyer, a writer, political legal commentator. |
0:42.9 | She's the Executive Director of the Canadian Constitution Foundation. |
0:47.8 | She's written widely on the effects of the COVID pandemic in Canada, and she's going |
0:51.9 | to talk to us about the legacy of the Freedom Convoy in Canada. |
0:56.4 | Joanna, thank you for joining us. |
0:58.5 | Great to be here with you. |
1:00.2 | Joanna, you've written several articles on COVID, on what the COVID restrictions in Canada, |
1:10.5 | what they've meant, what they've done. |
1:12.0 | You also have written about the Freedom Convoy in Canada and what it means. |
1:19.4 | The Convoy is over, the Emergencies Act has been lifted, that's sparked so much controversy |
1:26.7 | and commentary. |
1:28.0 | What do you think is the legacy now of the Freedom Convoy in Canada? |
1:33.5 | So I would actually talk about the legacy of the Freedom Convoy and brought the sort |
1:39.8 | of three categories. |
1:41.3 | So first, it is true, and many have observed, that although the federal government has not |
1:48.3 | dropped its cross-border vaccine mandate for truckers, which was sort of the match that |
1:54.4 | lit the fire in terms of the Convoy, they have not lifted that, but pretty much all of |
... |
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