Canadians tend to view US politics with a mixture of disdain and apprehension. Disdain because most of us think our system is better and apprehension because what happens in the US can have a big affect on Canada. Right now, we seem to be in the sights of an unhinged leader with no grasp of economics and no respect for international agreements. It's causing quite a stir up here in the Great White North.
So this post is a grab bag of some recent Canadian political commentary with some cultural asides.
First, here's Andrew Coyne from an opinion piece in The Globe and Mail (gift link).
The United States that openly threatens to invade Panama or Denmark – or to annex Canada – has not just stepped outside international law, including the basic Westphalian proscription of attempts to alter borders by force. Neither does a country that launches trade wars on a different country every day, including countries with which it has longstanding free trade treaties, reveal a simple lack of commitment to a rules-based approach to international trade. It is engaged in an all-out assault on both. It has become an outlaw state.
And in this regard, too, it is aligning itself with the dictatorships. That is what dictatorships do. It is intrinsic to their nature. Just as they refuse to be bound by law internally – we are counting down the days to when the Trump administration defies its first court order – so they recognize no law in their dealings with other states. (Or rules of any kind: you’ll have noticed they also cheat at sports. As does Mr. Trump.)
It is not just that the democratic world can no longer count on America. It is that America, under Mr. Trump, is no longer necessarily part of the democratic world: neither fully democratic in its own affairs, nor committed to the welfare of other democracies, but hostile to both. If the international order is to be preserved, then, it will have to be preserved, in part, from the United States. Certainly it will have to be rebuilt without it.
This article from Emmett Macfarlane looks at Canadian federalism and how it's being affected by Trumps antics and the spillover of the MAGA movement into Canada.
Instead, the problems created by federalism are political in nature, and it does not help that our country suffers from a juvenile culture of intergovernmental relations. In short, and to be blunt, our provinces tend to be run by mewling teenagers, who bitterly complain about the exercise of the federal spending power all while routinely demanding more money from the federal government and engaging in buck passing - constantly attempting to shift blame to the feds for problems within their own jurisdiction.
Worse still, the intersection of partisanship/ideology and federalism is a serious detriment in the context of US economic attacks and Trump’s rhetorical assaults on Canadian sovereignty. In short, while none of the premiers like what Trump is doing, some of them have ideological sympathies with Trump and seem entirely ill-equipped to dealing with him.
The recent misadventure of Canada’s 13 premiers visiting the United States to ‘negotiate’ with the White House is illustrative. The trip was a farce; some of the premiers appeared to genuinely believe that Trump, a total chaos agent, is someone who could be negotiated with. They ended up not meeting with either the President or any senior official but with staffers who promised to pass on the message and then snidely tweeted about Canada becoming a 51st state. And it appears the premiers have foolishly been paying a Trump-connected lobbying firm at its rate of $85,000/month for the privilege.
How Canadians feel about Trump's 51st state idea |
From author and NDP Member of Parliament, we have this.
In Canada, some leaders – the Prime Minister, Premier Furey, and Premier Eby – have been blunt regarding just how deadly and serious the Trump threat is. But despite these unprecedented statements, the political realm keeps dialing itself back to a false normal.
To be fair, there isn't a single political strategist or Comms person with any experience charting our way through these times. Canada hasn't faced a threat this serious since the 1930s. It’s okay to admit that none of us really know what to do now.
But rather than thinking outside the box, political strategists are sticking with the tried and true as if this will get us back to the world that existed before November 5, 2024.
I'm sorry, but the same old won't cut it.
On Wednesday, the CBC Radio One program, The Current, had a segment about how Trump has changed the Canadian electoral landscape. For those who may not be keeping up with Canadian politics, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced his forthcoming resignation, which will likely lead to a federal election after the Liberals choose a new leader in March. Ontario is in the middle of a provincial election campaign with an election coming on Monday with Premier Doug Ford spending a lot of time lobbying US politicians to fight Trump's proposed tariffs.
You can listen to The Current's segment here or read the show's transcript here. This part is from a discussion about Mark Carney, who may be be our next prime minister. (If only the US had a president with as much economic experience, sigh).
MG: Susan, Mark Carney won't say what he'll do in response to the Trump's, the tariffs that Donald Trump is proposing. He has not been elected. He has not led a party. Why is it a good idea for Canadians to gamble on him and for the party to gamble on him with all of those big question marks?
SUSAN SMITH: Well, he's not an unknown quantity. I think the rest of the sentence when he was speaking to Rosie was that I haven't been elected the leader yet, so not my place to insert myself in the negotiations. Look, I think when you elect a leader, he will be speaking about the policies. He's addressed some of the dollar for dollar tariffs that he would take on. But what he has said he is is he is an experienced negotiator. He worked at the Bank of Canada under Stephen Harper and Jim Flaherty, and he helped us navigate the economic crisis in 2008 as the governor of the Bank of Canada. Then England, Brexit, managing that. Then the private sector. Pierre Poilievre was elected as an MP when he was 26 years old. He hasn't worked in the real world in financial markets, dealing with the kinds of things and the kinds of global leaders and businesspeople that Canada's going to have to deal with. What we need in this turbulent time with Trump is a steady hand, a calm, a calm manager.
Finally, the idea of Canada becoming the 51st US state has united Canada in a way we haven't seen since at least the Vancouver Olympics. Here are a couple of songs that I've seen recently.
And here's another for you.