Trump’s view of Canada has a lot in common with Putin’s view of Ukraine (or Putin’s view of Ukraine has a lot in common with Trump’s view of Canada!)
Posted: February 18th, 2025 | No Comments »RANDALL WHITE, IN THE GLOBAL VILLAGE TODAY. TORONTO. FEBRUARY 18, 2025. Justin Trudeau’s Canada has been one of the strongest supporters of an independent Ukraine extant — morally (so to speak), rhetorically, symbolically, and in some degree financially (if not exactly or quite militarily).
Part of this flows from Canada’s status as what The Guardian in the UK has called the “world’s second largest Ukrainian diaspora.” (And note especially, eg, Justin Trudeau’s former minister of finance and deputy prime minister, and current Liberal leadership candidate, “Chrystia Freeland, who grew up in a tight-knit rural Ukrainian community” in Alberta.)
Yet another more narrowly political reality also contributes to Canada’s strong support for Ukrainian independence, especially after the Russian invasion that began on February 24, 2022 — and the resulting “war” that Trump and Putin may or may not be trying to resolve, in some unlikely way that will mostly benefit Russia.
As clarified by Trump’s latest ranting about the 51st state (due north of the USA), his view of Canada has a lot in common with Putin’s view of Ukraine. (Or Putin’s view of Ukraine has a lot in common with Trump’s view of Canada!)
(a) Trump inadvertently draws on the depths of American political culture
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Both men see the adjacent smaller country (well, in population in Canada’s case at least) as some kind of inherent or otherwise logical part of the genial but far from gentle giant next door. Both men have 21st century imperial ambitions, for themselves and the countries they claim to personify.
In the case of Trump’s America there is a long history of seeing Canada as in truth just another unacknowledged part of the USA — especially on the right-conservative (as opposed to left-progressive) side of US politics.
Trump may be bringing something closer to the end of Democracy in America than any US presidential figure before (leaving Jefferson Davis aside). But in his ultimate attitude to Canada — as in so much else — he is inadvertently drawing on the depths of American political culture.
The relevant history includes the War of 1812–1814 in North America — the modern American Republic’s last great attempt to invade Canada. The Canada that was not successfully invaded then (thanks to the seasoned troops of the British empire, and their North American native allies under Chief Tecumseh, a successor to Chief Pontiac) went on to become the early Canadian confederation under the Constitution Act, 1867 … and then finally the present-day altogether independent “free and democratic society” of Canada under the Constitution Act, 1982 (with its Charter of Rights and Freedoms).
(b) Aisha Ahmad’s “Why annexing Canada would destroy the United States”
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What would happen if Donald Trump went completely off his rocker and ordered the Pentagon to invade Canada today, in the 2020s?
Stephen Marche had an initial run at this complex subject in the issue of Maclean’s dated January 9, 2025 : “Why America Can’t Conquer Canada … Donald Trump’s nonsensical threats are an attempt to distract from his own country’s self-destruction.”
More recently, Aisha Ahmad’s “Why annexing Canada would destroy the United States,” published February 11, 2025 on THE CONVERSATION website, offers the most brilliant and realistic discussion of the issue I have seen so far. Suitably enough, Ms Ahmad, an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto, is “a multiple award-winning International Security scholar specializing in international interventions, insurgencies, and complex civil wars.”
Her BA, MA, and PhD degrees from the University of Toronto and McGill University in Montreal give her just the right additional background to discuss any potential US attempt to annex Canada in the present day and age! And of course she wisely concludes it just can’t happen, for a host of reasons now deeply embedded in the history of North America from the late 18th century to the present late (?maybe mid? ?certainly snowy?) winter of 2025.
(c) Trumpian 51st state nonsense in early 2025 still ultimately good for future of independent sovereign UN member state of Canada
Finally, I have recently stumbled across three other articles vaguely related to the same broad subject :
(1) Bill Scher’s piece in the February 6, 2025 Washington Monthly : “Trump’s Imperialism Puts Americans Last … If you ever suggested Donald Trump is an isolationist (and I have), you have been shown the error of your ways. Trump is not an isolationist. He is an imperialist … He began his second term announcing bizarre plans for territorial expansion: demanding a return of the Panama Canal, pining for Canada to be the 51st state, and gunning for Greenland … Reaching new levels of absurdity, Trump now lays claim to Gaza.”
(2) For more on the link between Trump on Canada and Putin on the Ukraine see Jim Harding, “Opinion: Canada can be seen as Trump’s Ukraine in new imperial era … The contradictory response of Canada’s premiers shows our vulnerability as Trump poses a real threat to Canadian independence,” in the Saskatoon StarPhoenix for January 21, 2025.
(3) As a final sobering reminder to all Canadians about the ultimate climate of opinion in the wider North America note Lawrence Martin on “A message from the Americans: Quite frankly Canada, we don’t give a damn” in the Globe and Mail, January 29, 2025.
Yet … all this crazed Trumpian rhetoric about the 51st American state in early 2025 still, more than ever, strikes me as ultimately quite good for the future of the independent sovereign UN member state of Canada.
Professor Aisha Ahmad’s excellent new “Why annexing Canada would destroy the United States” is just one of many growing cases in point … The Donald II in all his anti-Canadian craziness is finally just forcing us to accept our own more modest but definitely equally manifest (and altogether independent) northern destiny … out loud and in public …at last …