How Justin Trudeau captured the zeitgeist, and how he lost it
TORONTO — In his early days as prime minister, Justin Trudeau was “cool.” In the year that followed his majority sweep into power, he appeared in the pages of Vogue, on the cover of a Marvel comic book and on “The Daily Show,” chatting with an up-and-coming Hasan Minhaj.
But the same strategy experts and observers say put him in the public eye and won him the youth vote in 2015 may have brought damning scrutiny as political tides changed, particularly as his rivals adopted his online style.
“He created a movement in 2015 and he got a lot of young people engaged,” said Albert Burgesson, who sat on the Prime Minister’s Youth Council from 2019 until 2021.
“The same people that are asking for change today, or looking for a different leader today — a lot of these young people, they started to pay attention because of it.”