The Populist Radical Right Goes Canadian: An Analysis of Kellie Leitch’s
Failed 2016–2017 Conservative Party of Canada Leadership Campaign
BRIAN BUDD UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH, ONTARIOPopulism and World Politics: Exploring Inter- and Transnational Dimensions, 2019
Conservative Leadership candidate Kellie Leitch relied heavily on a populist discourse and policy agenda.
Leitch’s campaign was ultimately unsuccessful, as her rhetoric and policies were widely condemned among
members of her own party and the Canadian public. My paper examines why Leitch’s populist campaign
failed to resoA new wave of populist leaders, parties, and movements have emerged across establish
Western democracies. These leaders have received populist zeitgeist.Notably, the campaign of 2017
considerable support while challenging the socio-political status quo at both national and global levels
of governance. While largely a spectator to the rise of some of the more notable populist leaders,
Canada has not been immune to the current global nate with and appeal to Conservatives.
Using Moffitt’s (The Global Rise of Populism: Performance, Political Style, and Representation,
Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2016) theoretical framework that conceptualizes populism as a
distinct political style that is performed, embodied, and enacted across different political and cultural
contexts, I argue that the failure of Leitch’s campaign is due largely to her inability to convincingly
perform core tenet of a populist style of politics in a manner that resonated within the social and
cultural milieu of Canada. More generally, Leitch’s campaign demonstrates the difficulties facing
female leaders intending to practice populism due to the inherent masculinity of the populist style.
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