New StatsCan Survey Shows Canadians Losing Faith in Parliament and Media

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ER Editor: Given the rate of malfeasance and rot over the last 12 months or so in Canada and everywhere at the government & media level (since the StatsCan data was collected), we could assume the numbers are even worse by now.

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New StatsCan Survey Shows Canadians Losing Faith in Parliament and Media

Latest Canadian Social Survey data from Q4 2024 reveals confidence in Federal Parliament at historic lows, with trust in Canadian media also sharply eroding

Canada is experiencing a quiet but unmistakable crisis of legitimacy, and the numbers prove it.

New data from the Statistics Canada Canadian Social Survey for the fourth quarter of 2024 shows what many Canadians already feel in their gut: confidence in the country’s most powerful institutions is eroding fast. And nowhere is that collapse more obvious than in Federal Parliament and the Canadian media.

According to the survey, just 28.3% of Canadians say they have high confidence (ratings of 4 or 5 out of 5) in Federal Parliament. That’s not a typo. Fewer than three in ten Canadians trust the institution that claims to represent them. Even worse, 40% report low confidence—the highest level of distrust recorded for any major institution measured.

This is not some abstract dissatisfaction. It is a direct verdict on years of centralized power, elite insulation, and political arrogance. Canada’s parliamentary system is characterized by some of the strictest party discipline among democracies, with power heavily concentrated in the Prime Minister’s Office and backbench MPs rarely deviating from the party line—effectively sidelining independent representation. Parliament has become a closed ecosystem—accountable upward to party leadership and international commitments, not downward to ordinary Canadians paying the bills amid a severe cost-of-living crisis.

This includes a housing affordability emergency exacerbated by rapid population growth from record immigration levels that far outstripped housing supply (with population growth hitting multi-decade highs in 2023–2024 while starts lagged), pushing home prices and rents to unsustainable levels for younger generations. At the same time, federal debt has more than doubled since 2015 to over $1.2 trillion, driving annual interest payments above $50 billion—even as deficits continued and economic anxiety deepened. These pressures have fueled widespread grievance, with polls showing growing skepticism toward government handling of core issues like immigration, the economy, and democratic responsiveness.

The story doesn’t improve when you look at the Canadian media.

Only 36.2% of Canadians say they have high confidence in the media, while nearly 30% express outright low confidence. Among men, distrust is even sharper, reflecting a growing perception that legacy outlets function less as watchdogs and more as enforcement arms for a narrow ideological consensus. Canadians see the bias. They see the omissions. And they are no longer buying what’s being sold.

Contrast that with institutions closer to everyday life. Police services still command relatively strong public trust, with over 63% high confidence nationwide, while schools and the justice system sit in the middle—far from perfect, but nowhere near the credibility collapse facing Parliament and the press.

Regionally, the divide is stark. Western provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan show especially low confidence in Federal Parliament, with nearly half of respondents expressing distrust. Quebec stands out as an outlier, showing comparatively higher confidence—but even there, Parliament fails to earn majority trust.

This isn’t just about numbers. It’s about legitimacy.

When citizens no longer trust lawmakers or the media meant to scrutinize them, democracy doesn’t function—it decays. The ruling class may dismiss this as “populist anger” or “misinformation,” but that dismissal is exactly the problem. Trust isn’t lost overnight. It’s squandered through arrogance, censorship, and contempt for ordinary people.

The message from Canadians in late 2024 is unmistakable: power without accountability breeds distrust. And unless that changes, these numbers will only get worse.

Source

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