Beginning mid-January 2022, Dichter was the spokesman, and the co-organizer of crowd funding, for the
Canada convoy protest. Dichter was listed, together with Tamara Lich, on the
GoFundMe crowd-funding campaign. A superior court ruling on a
Mareva injunction motion, resulted in the freezing of accounts holding donated funds. In February 2022, Dichter agreed to move the funds into an
escrow account. Dichter described his general views that align with the convoy in testimony at the
Public Order Emergency Commission (POEC) in November 2022. He stated that he was vaccinated, but uncomfortable with mandates and
ArriveCAN app and data tracking due to his work in trucking. He described his main message as spokesman was "peace, love, unity and freedom". Concerned with individuals and groups creating discord or promoting controversial messages in the protest, including James Bauder, Jeremy MacKenzie and
Pat King and others, Dichter recommended official messaging to separate from others. He has self-published the book
Honking for Freedom: The Truckers Convoy that Gave us Hope that was co-written with former journalist John Goddard. At the end of 2023, Dichter remained a named defendant in a $300 million class-action lawsuit launched by Ottawa residents. == Views and punditry ==