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Masks of hegemony: populism, neoliberalism, and welfare narratives in British Columbia, 1975-2004

For all but thirteen years of the decades from 1952 to 2017, British Columbia was
electorally dominated by the Social Credit Party and its ideological successor, the BC
Liberal Party. These organizations represented the interests of business in opposition to
the social democratic NDP, which has drawn a core support base from organized labour
and the public sector middle class. This thesis frames the Social Credit-BC Liberal
political formation as a ruling class bloc that maintained hegemony by switching
between distinct rhetorical modes as the political situation required or allowed, with
economic austerity, framed as objective necessity, on one hand, and populism,
employing overt moralism and down-to-earth posturing, on the other. I posit that both
modes operated to mask the class conflict at the heart of the neoliberal project of free markets, public sector reduction, and social atomization that has attained the status of
political and economic “common sense” since its policies began to be widely adopted
around the world in the late 1970s.

After providing a background for the rise of Social Credit in British Columbia under W.A.C.
Bennett (premier from 1952-1972), this thesis tracks the continuities and changes of the
province’s hegemonic bloc, using welfare policies and poverty discourses as a focus. I
consider the party’s transition from a populist one that appealed to the province’s
evangelical Christian population to a modernized, neoliberal party under Bill Bennett’s leadership (1975-1986). Exploring the rationales surrounding the cuts to welfare funding enacted under the Social Credit governments of Bill Bennett and Bill Vander Zalm and the BC Liberal government of Gordon Campbell (2001-2011), I analyze how neoliberal and populist styles were employed, what the relationship between the two was, and the extent to which moralism was part of both styles/discourses regarding poverty. I also look at the extent to which the collective solidarity of anti-poverty activists and progressive religious groups was able to push back against neoliberal and populist policies, resisting the individualism that neoliberalism attempts to enforce. In these ways, this thesis seeks to contribute to making neoliberalism a topic of critical political analysis and deliberation at a time when its policies are often framed as non-ideological. / Graduate

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uvic.ca/oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/11080
Date29 August 2019
CreatorsKoehn, Drew
ContributorsBlue, Gregory, Marks, Lynne Sorrel
Source SetsUniversity of Victoria
LanguageEnglish, English
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf
RightsAvailable to the World Wide Web

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