Recently, Tristan Hopper of the National Post examined the growing generational divide within Canada’s electorate. Increasingly, young Canadians are emerging as the more conservative demographic. They have spent a decade watching government mismanagement drive up debts and deficits. This has widened inequality and left them with fewer opportunities than their parents and grandparents.
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Young Canadians are more skeptical of big government than their peers abroad. They are especially skeptical about spending, debt, and state intervention. This skepticism influences their political attitudes.
Canada is becoming an outlier in the West. Young adults are adopting views that challenge the typical progressive narrative linked to their age group. This change highlights a distinct shift in Canadian political attitudes.
Young Canadians are not shifting to the right because of ideology. They want more than just the promise of lower taxes; they wish for a new deal for their generation.
This makes Canada an outlier in the West. While youth elsewhere drift left, young Canadians are challenging the old assumptions about what their generation should believe. They want accountability. They want affordability. They want a country where hard work leads to opportunity, not to higher rents and heavier tax burdens.
Their shift isn’t a retreat; it’s an act of agency. If we are willing to listen, this is the most hopeful sign yet. This suggests that a rising generation is ready to rebuild what has been lost.

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