Justin Trudeau gave an eye-popping display of showmanship in B.C. last week that political veterans and analysts say they haven’t witnessed since his father captured baby-boomer imaginations in 1968. Trudeaumania II? Unlikely, given the Age of Aquarius has given way to an era of attack ads and deep political cynicism. And Trudeau is still far from a polished politician, struggling last week to deal with policy issues such as the new federal requirement for First Nations to publicly disclose their leaders’ remuneration. But the Liberal leader, who so frequently seems outclassed among his intellectually forceful and more experienced adversaries on Parliament Hill, gave other politicians a clinic on how to connect with ordinary citizens at events like Vancouver’s Aug. 3 Pride parade. “Oh my God, it’s Justin Trudeau! Justin, I love you!” shouted a startled Joanna Ludlow, 21, when she realized Trudeau, clearly relaxed and basking in the crowd’s affection, was leading a group of flamboyantly-dressed Liberals dancing through Vancouver’s West End in the blazing sunshine. Trudeau was in a long-sleeve white cotton shirt, blue jeans and alligator shoes, wearing cheap gold and red beads someone put around his neck just before the parade began. He moved easily from one side of the street to the other as the crowds responded to his smile and wave like a magnet. Ken Bonham, a 57-year-old Revelstoke businessman and usually a Conservative voter, said after posing for a photo with Trudeau that he’d “definitely” consider a Liberal switch. “He clearly connects with the working man. He’s not uptight like other politicians who you only see in a suit and tie.” And it wasn’t just the traditionally boisterous enthusiasm at Pride that explains the response. A Vancouver-based pundit for the arch-conservative Sun News Network, put on air last week to slam the mainstream media’s alleged fawning treatment of Trudeau, sounded as awestruck as a teen at a Justin Bieber concert after attending an event at Douglas Park in Vancouver on Aug. 4. “He is like a rock star,” J.J. McCullough told a grim-looking interviewer who was clearly hoping for a more cynical assessment for viewers of the unabashedly pro-Harper government network. “I mean, he can barely move five feet without being swarmed by mobs of people wanting to, you know, take selfies with him. “You do really sort of get the sense that this man is bigger than mere politics, that he is a sort of phenomenon, he is a personality, he is a force of nature. “And it was really quite remarkable to sort of see that in the flesh.” Neither Trudeau nor his critics and fans could adequately explain why a man in his early 40s with a relatively thin resumé and few significant career accomplishments can generate such enthusiasm. After Ludlow shouted “I love you Justin” and secured her selfie, she was asked what attracts her to Trudeau. “I agree with what he stands for,” the young woman declared confidently. Challenged, Ludlow looked sheepishly to a friend sitting in the sidewalk beside her: “Ah … what does he stand for?”

The consensus among interview subjects at Pride seemed to be that Trudeau stands for youth, hope, change, and for being profoundly different from Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Trudeau’s traditional answer is similar — that Canadians are enthusiastically responding to him because they are tired of Harper’s negative approach to politics. But Trudeau doesn’t hesitate to acknowledge that the adoration is linked to his father’s legacy. “I had to learn a long time ago that there are (people) out there who dislike me for reasons that have nothing to do with who I am and everything to do with history, and I have to disregard them,” he told The Vancouver Sun in an exclusive interview. “But so must I sometimes take with a grain of salt people who totally adore me for historical reasons. And I have to focus on being myself.” Indeed, several at Pride rushing out to get photographs did so on behalf of older relatives still enamoured with Trudeau’s father. The historical link is especially profound in certain immigrant communities who felt they benefited from Pierre Trudeau’s policies on immigration and human rights from 1968 to 1984. One Sikh women at the Douglas Park picnic said the Liberal leader is often referred to by older women in her community who consider him a family member. The so-called “aunties” call him “mera Justin” or “sada Justin” – “my Justin” or “our Justin” in Punjabi, or even “sada putr” – “our son,” said Sarbjeet Kaur Sarai, a Liberal activist and baptized Sikh. The buzz during Trudeau’s three-day Lower Mainland swing was most comparable, say analysts and longtime Liberals, to two political events: Barack Obama’s campaign to become America’s first black president in 2008, and Pierre Elliott Trudeau’s remarkable 1968 campaign, when the shy but flamboyant former Montreal law professor won a sweeping national majority and took 16 of 23 B.C. seats with 42 per cent of the popular vote on the West Coast. That’s a far cry from two out of 36 B.C. seats and a 13 per cent vote share the Liberals won in the 2011 election under leader Michael Ignatieff. Justin Trudeau still has a long way to go before the scheduled 2015 election to match the initial euphoria generated by his ascot-wearing, sports car-driving father on the West Coast. Many skeptics say Trudeau could easily crash and burn, especially in the spotlight of campaign scrutiny and TV debates against Harper and the NDP’s Thomas Mulcair. Harper and Mulcair are intellectually formidable and experienced politicians who can barely hide their contempt for Trudeau. “Shine wears off. Substance and experience doesn’t,” says Industry Minister James Moore, Harper’s B.C. lieutenant and the man Harper will rely on convince British Columbians not to buy what Trudeau is selling. Even some of the people at Pride who wanted their photo taken with Trudeau expressed doubts. “I don’t think he’s proven himself yet,” said Bill Bone, 65, who typically votes Conservative. The Liberals are effectively a three-way tie with the Tories and NDP in B.C., all around 30 per cent, according to poll gathering website threehundredeight.com.