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4 - Aspiration for Collective Progress: Diversity and Digital Intimacy as Practised by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (US), Sadiq Khan (UK) and Jagmeet Singh (Canada)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2023

Sukhmani Khorana
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales, Sydney
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Summary

When newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau revealed his cabinet in 2015, it was lauded globally for both its gender parity and ethnic diversity. Trudeau later declared that it was important to have a ministry that ‘looked like Canada’. This led commentators in other settler colonial and immigrant nations, especially in the Global North, to ponder why such parity in terms of political representation has not been possible in their own domestic political spheres thus far. This chapter discussed three case studies that will aim to demonstrate that the political party and parliamentary structures in certain settler immigrant contexts not only enable more ‘ethnics’ to participate but also that this gives voice to the collective aspirations of their communities. As seen in the previous chapter on ethnic comedians, these aspirations go beyond the first generation’s presumed emphasis on job and financial security. Such aspirations are also reflected in the speeches and social media campaigns of culturally diverse political representatives (Khorana, 2022). In this instance, I will undertake a thematic analysis of such material obtained from the social media accounts and mainstream media coverage of Jagmeet Singh (Canada), Sadiq Khan (UK) and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (US). These politicians have been chosen as they carefully build a distinct identity (akin to a brand) and a following through social media platforms that set them up as not only culturally diverse but also more relatable than mainstream political representatives. Their practices of ‘digital intimacy’ constitute a kind of populism for diverse, usually young, political leaders that facilitates the channelling of collective aspirations for their followers and constituents.

While there may be diverse parliamentarians in the Global North who do not subscribe to progressive views and policy platforms, they are not included in the scope of this chapter. This is because the specific interest here lies in aspiration as a complex affect associated with economic migrants and how it can be mobilised for wider public good in political discourses centred on collective identity.

Introduction: types of ‘diversity’ in representation and what matters

In contemporary discourses about diversity in the realms of ‘representation’ in liberal democracies, such as formal politics and mainstream media, diverse representation is commonly understood as reflecting the ethnic mix of the population (Khorana, 2020a).

Type
Chapter
Information
Mediated Emotions of Migration
Reclaiming Affect for Agency
, pp. 63 - 76
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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