His newfound nationalism is substance-free. Credit: Getty

During his 1969 visit to the United States, Canada’s then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau held a news conference at which he described his American hosts in a memorable analogy. “Living next to you”, he said, “is in some ways like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even-tempered is the beast, if I can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt”.
The phrase “sleeping with an elephant” has come to define US-Canadian relations in the minds of many Canadians. But since President Trump launched his second term in the Oval Office, the elephant has been neither friendly nor even-tempered. In fact, its twitches and grunts have recently become more like angry kicks and menacing roars, especially with Trump’s imposition of a 25% tariff on most goods from Canada.
Rather than meek acceptance, however, the response in Canada has been a surge of nationalist sentiment. Only, at the helm of this patriotic revival is a new prime minister, Mark Carney, for whom the substance of Canadian identity amounts to little more than . . . globalism, multiculturalism, and liberal proceduralism.
Trump has offered varied justifications for his punishing tariffs. He alleges an uncontrolled stream of illegal immigrants and fentanyl pouring across the border, notwithstanding the Canadian government’s serious efforts at interdicting such flows. He is on much firmer ground when he points to the trade imbalance between the two counties, with Canada running a significant trade surplus with the United States; about 20% of what Canada produces is consumed by Americans.
At a meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Justin Trudeau, the recently ousted prime minister, protested that such tariffs would “kill the Canadian economy”, eliciting from Trump a suggestion that Canada would be better off as the 51st state. This line was initially heard by most people as a jest, but Trump has become fixated on the idea. Remarks about the US-Canadian border as an “artificially drawn line” have fueled fears that his real endgame is annexation.
Perhaps Trump is just trolling, something that certainly wouldn’t be out of character for him. But a recent post on his Truth Social website signals that he may mean business. “The only thing that makes sense is for Canada to become our cherished Fifty First State”, he wrote. “This would make all Tariffs, and everything else, totally disappear”. Trudeau, for one, takes Trump at his word, stating that he believes the real aim of the tariffs is nothing less than “a total collapse of the Canadian economy because that will make it easier to annex us”.
Trump’s tariffs and his annexation rhetoric have had consequences that he surely did not intend. Canadians have never been big flag-wavers, but sales of Canadian flags have skyrocketed, American liquors are being pulled from store shelves, grocery stores are slapping labels on domestically produced items, and many people are scrapping travel plans to the United States. A movement to boycott US goods is underway.
The tariffs have also been a godsend to the governing Liberal Party. Trudeau’s plummeting approval ratings threatened to deliver his party a crashing defeat in the election to be held later this year. But when Trudeau’s unpopularity prompted his resignation, the Liberals were forced to replace him as party leader and prime minister. Mark Carney, an economist and banker with no previous experience in elected office, won in a landslide in the party vote. Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, the Liberals are now inching their way back up in the polls, though they still face a steep uphill climb.
Carney’s victory speech on 9 March tapped into the rising nationalist sentiment. Switching back and forth from English to French, Canada’s two official languages, he called out Trump for “trying to weaken our economy”. But more than the Canadian economy is at stake, he warned: “The Americans want our resources, our water, our land, our country. If they succeed, they will destroy our way of life.”
What exactly did Carney mean by the phrase “our way of life”? Hockey, maple syrup, Tim Hortons, and politeness come to mind. But the features of Canadian identity that Carney highlighted were all political or institutional, such as universal health care and the country’s strong tradition of social programs and wealth redistribution. He also lauded Canada’s much-vaunted policy of multiculturalism: “America is a melting pot. Canada is a mosaic.”
“America is not Canada. And Canada never, ever, will be part of America in any way, shape, or form”, he declared to an enthusiastic audience. He made it clear that the future of Canada now depends on pivoting away from economic integration with the United States to seek more “reliable” trading partners.
Carney also sought to attach the odour of Trump to the opposition party, insinuating that the Conservative standard-bearer Pierre Poilievre “worships at the altar of Donald Trump”. To accuse Poilievre of kneeling before the US president may be an overstatement, but he has voiced support for many of Trump’s policies and has a reputation of being cozy with MAGA types. He recently accepted the endorsement of Elon Musk, an action that may come back to bite him.
Still, Carney is an unlikely champion of Canadian nationalism. Born in the Northwest Territories, he spent most of his adult life outside Canada, studying at Harvard and Oxford, then working for Goldman Sachs in London, New York, and Tokyo. After a stint as the governor of the Bank of Canada, he in the same role at the Bank of England. He holds both British and Irish citizenship, making him an EU citizen.
From the perspective of nationalism, it is noteworthy that he stoked controversy at the helm of the Bank of England when, prior to the Brexit vote, he decried leaving the European Union as the “biggest domestic risk to financial stability”. Many interpreted his remark as a political intervention that overstepped his job description.
Carney also has strong ties to globalist elites, with memberships in the G30, the World Economic Forum, and the Bilderberg Group. In short, he is the quintessential Davos Man, a cosmopolitan technocrat and financial bureaucrat with a newfound fondness for nationalist rhetoric.
Arguably, what Carney defends as “our way of life” is a vision of Canadians as good global citizens pulling their weight within the rules-based international order that Trump seeks to dismantle. As Canadian political scientist Tyler Chamberlain has observed, “Canadian identity is bound up very closely with multilateralism, international organisations, and free trade. That’s the kind of nationalism that is playing well today”. Meanwhile, Canadians watch American television, cheer American sports teams, and “think like Americans in many ways that really matter — but we have health care.”
Carney is a specimen of what Canadian political philosopher Ron Dart calls liberal nationalism, which is of relatively recent vintage, the chief precedent for the present moment being Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau’s trade disputes with Richard Nixon. “Liberal nationalism usually emerges from a position taken by the United States at a given moment that threatens certain elements of the Canadian economy”, says Dart. It tends to be reactive and narrowly focused on economics.
It differs from what Dart calls High Tory nationalism, “which comes from a much deeper grounding in the Canadian soul”. Its most prominent exponent in the 20th century was the philosopher George Parkin Grant, but it harks back to the founding of Canada as a nation that sought to preserve British and French traditions that were foreign to the society taking shape in the United States. Instead of placing a premium on liberty and individualism, like the Americans, the Canadian High Tory tradition aspired to a more orderly society oriented toward the common good of the whole.
Over time, however, Canada was transformed into what Grant called a “branch plant satellite” of the United States, a supplier of raw materials to the superpower that had emerged postwar as the “spearhead” of the dynamic liberal capitalist order. As early as 1965, Grant lamented that Canada was ceasing to exist as a sovereign nation. Dependent on the United States for both markets and defense, Canada was being absorbed, culturally and economically, into the behemoth to its south. Canada’s formal political independence might still persist for some time, Grant thought, but only due to a kind of inertia.
Grant believed that Canada was being swallowed up into an emerging global order helmed by the American hegemon. In a surprising twist, the American republic that now threatens Canadian sovereignty is a nation in open revolt against that liberal hegemonic order. Living within the gravitational field of the United States, Canada has always retained ties to its older roots in Europe. Ironically, Trump is now forcing Canada to become more internationalist in the name of Canadian nationalism.
But Dart believes this current upsurge of liberal nationalism is shallow. Though intensely felt at the moment, it is also likely to be ephemeral, lasting only as long as MAGA’s reign, since it is motivated by an external threat rather than a living memory of older Canadian traditions. “If you have no memory of anything”, he says, “then what holds you together? What holds Canadians together at this point is anti-Trumpism”.
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SubscribeHow does Carney reconcile his dislike and opposition to Brexit with this sudden wrapping of himself in maple leaves. Such a hypocrite
He’s a politician, a species that is capable of holding competing thoughts simultaneously without recognizing the inherent conflict.
But he isn’t a politician. He clearly wants to be but I think it will become clear that he doesn’t have what it takes.
Canada is a “middle power”. It survives based on trade and good relations with other countries, which is dependant on the survival the Rules Based International Order. Canada’s sovereignty and the Rules Based Order is what Trump is trying to destroy. So maybe not such a hypocrite.
The author says that Canada runs a significant trade surplus with the U.S. Significant for whom? From Trump’s perspective, the U.S. deficit with Canada in 2024 was US$45 billion. In that year, the U.S. imported from the rest of the world US$4,100 billion and exported US$3,200 billion. Their deficit with us ( our surplus ) is a rounding error for them, but important for us, we being 1/14th their size ( we used to be 1/10th their size, pre-Trudeau ). Trade, fentanyl and immigration are pretexts to bully Canada, probably to make an example of us, perhaps also because that man-child in the White House despises Trudeau.
Carney is a scaremonger ( weather as an ‘existential’ threat, Brexit as economic catastrophic, Trump as the end of the French language in Quebec ) and surprisingly illiterate when it comes to economics ( the Yuan could ( should? ) replace the $U.S., the GFC as a failure of free markets, etc )
I’m with Dart. A country’s memory of itself is important and Trudeau did what he could to destroy the “memory” of Canada. This maple syrup nationalism in reaction to Trump’s bluster is a mile wide and an inch deep. And I’m not sure at all about how wide it is. Still, the country has so much going for, one has to remain hopeful.
I agree. I don’t understand why the focus is so much on Canada. The levels of trade don’t warrant this level of attention. On its face, this seems almost nonsensical, but we must consider that Trump isn’t aiming to speak to foreign peoples through the filter of diplomats, foreign leaders, media, and policy. He’s doing internationally what made him successful domestically, bypassing the gatekeepers and speaking directly to the people. He may simply be looking to generate nationalism, because ultimately, nationalist sentiment will undermine the international globalists who have been Trump’s enemies domestically. Having won the conflict at home, he pushes to undermine the globalists elsewhere by stirring nationalist sentiment from their people and as a leader of a foreign nation, that’s trivially easy. It may appear to be benefiting the liberals in the short-term, but in the long-run, as this author points out, nationalist sentiment for internationalism makes no sense.
Much will become known in the next four years as we gauge the reaction of the American people to Trump’s reforms and the end of the old order. If it proves popular, as I believe is likely, the nations of the world will have to come to terms with the fact that it’s not Trump, but the people who elected him, who are really destroying the old order, and that’s an entirely different conflict than dealing with one rogue politician. I don’t support the President’s actions towards Canada. I think there were better ways of handling it, but I didn’t get elected. I suppose in the spirit of the new nationalist era I will defer to the judgement of my fellow Americans for the time being, until we begin to see the results of Trump’s policies.
I grew up near the Canadian border and have fond memories of how nice Canadian society was and how clean the cities were. Personally I wish President Trump waited until after the Canadian election to push on the tariff button. I think we have had a mutually beneficial relationship. I remember in the days pre-9/11 when I could drive across the border and simply state I was born in the USA without having to show any identification. We had mutual trust rather than mutual suspicion.
Tariffs will hurt consumers on both sides of the border. I hope there is a way for us all to climb down from this disagreement. I feel Canada can be how it is since it can basically rely on the US for defense and has a ready market for much of its exports. Perhaps if Trudeau gave Trump something of a win, such as commitment to spend more on defense, buy more US products and or commit to investing more in the US, the spat could have passed.
Canada has a GDP per person at about 65% of the US. It should be closer and if I was Canadian I would like to see a government in place that would help grow and strengthen the economy.
“….I could drive across the border and simply state I was born in the USA without having to show any identification“. Wouldn’t it have been easier to just have the Bruce Springsteen song blaring from your car stereo as you crossed the border?
What products, and how high are the tariffs on goods produced in USA, and exported to Canada- pre Trump?
Why no talk of eliminating tariffs in both directions?
After the cartel and drug movements are stopped.
Carney is seriously bad news. We couldn’t wait to see the back of him in the UK, and I hope that Canadians will be wise enough to dump him at the forthcoming general election. He is one of the Woking Class elites who should not be trusted in any role.
He was at Oxford* for two years and did his DPhil there, so ‘we’ are not entirely blameless for this particular creature.
*1993-1995.
Elites! What true Tory would not want to be part of an elite. Unfortunately you are right about the Woke part. But what choice do Canadians have? Trump/Poilievre is hardly a choice, if you still want to be Canadian. What is concerning, is that after Poilievre having a lead in the polls for the last 2 years of 20%, is how disenfranchising an electoral defeat will be to the Conservative base in Alberta and Saskatchewan.
Carney is indeed the perfect Davos Man. His first act as PM has been a trip to Europe to hug Starmer and Macron.
The Liberals are paying lip service to long-standing Conservative policy ideas (good ideas at any time, not just in crisis) but they will inevitably backslide because they don’t in them.
As a Canadian, I am very upset that we think the answer to our problems is to have a globalist, techno-bureaucratic banker at the helm. Did we learn nothing from 2008? Our country hasn’t had a clear sense of identity for my entire life, aside from “not being American” and being resource tiles for the rest of the world. We are so “tolerant” and “open” that we are literally transparent. There is no sense of social cohesion, and the big cities are filled with garbage, tents, crime, and a high rents. It is simultaneously a competitive, hypercapitalist free-for-all and a finger-wagging liberal thought police state. We do have good healthcare, though. And our infrastructure is better.
Personally, I wouldn’t mind being annexed. The US has their problems that we’d inherit, but then maybe our dollar would be worth something, houses would become affordable again, and we could join the fight in pushing back against this WEF new world order that has turned our country into grey goo. I do wish Trump had waited until Poilievre got in before starting this whole mess.
The irony to me is that Canada lost its way decades ago because of the influence of the USA, and now that the USA is doing “the right thing” in the current Trumpian moves away from the global neoliberal technocratic order, we are stubbornly refusing to go along and get back to where we should be. It’s like we’re 30 years behind the States, politically. They led us to fall into a pit, and now they’re climbing out of it and we’re refusing to accept their helping hand up. Out of spite. We’re a little yappy dog next to a giant mastiff. We need a serious reality check.
That’s why Poilievre won’t win, many of his supporters are Trumpists like yourself and are prepared to betray their country. Poilievre is a Trump wannabe, he’s had to change his tune several times in the past 6 months. Now he’s pretending to be a Canadian nationalist because Trump is attacking Canada, many conservatives are upset that their mentor Trump has turned on Canada like a rabid dog, and are caught with their pants down to the ankles not knowing how to react and where to turn. Annexation is a non starter, is probably supported by less than 10% of the population, who are mostly Trump lovers who should move to the US. Canada will survive as Trumpism implodes in the US in the next 2 years, Difficult times are coming for sure, but Canada will survive, hopefully with some lessons learned.
A harder turn to the left would satisfy your lot.
Betray my country? My whole point is that we aren’t a country. George Grant saw that over half a century ago when he identified us as the first post-national state. It’s mutliculturalism vs the melting pot. We’re everything and nothing. That’s why I’m so cynical about all this sudden national pride on both sides of the aisle. Only boomers that rode the housing inflation wave to retirement prosperity think this country is doing okay.
Trumpism is, ironically, the only thing that will save us as a nation. And I don’t think it is going anywhere anytime soon.
Polling results suggest that you are most likely residing in Alberta.
A better nationalism would be to build the United Kingdom of Great Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (just known as the United Kingdom, for short). One King, one government, one parliament (in Vancouver), one prime minister, one currency (£), one Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, one Supreme Court, a common nuclear deterrent, a common external tariff, a common external immigration policy, free movement and trade within the country, strong self government at “state level” (i.e. England, Scotland, NSW, Alberta etc).
I like it!
The Labour Party and its Blob would put a quick end to this fantasy.
I think this idea/fantasy is actually (unfortunately) very blob-friendly. Imagine them being tasked with setting up a new civil service and quangocracy! It will be like all their Christmases coming at once! It would be like the glory days of the EEC in Brussels.
If Canada doesn’t want to be part of the US why do you think it would want to be part of the UK?! Also, there are the needs of Quebec to satisfy, so maybe a better idea would be to strengthen Canada’s relations with the EU and our relationship with The Commonwealth.
I like this idea. That array of nations collectively might be able to sustain a reasonable facsimile of what the US did in the unipolar era, but those nations are far more temperamentally suited to the role. The USA as a global hegemon and defender of an international order was always an awkward fit that ran contrary to the fiercely independent spirit of the country. The UK, being an island nation and having once held colonies around the world, has a more suitably outward looking culture and political climate. It seems impossible, but then if you’d told me in 2012 that Donald Trump of all people would become the second President to win non-consecutive terms, I’d have laughed at how incredibly improbable it was.
I agree Steve. And I think while it sounds outlandish, it is no crazier than the idea of the UK leaving the EU was in 2014. Certainly I can imagine a “CANZUK” arrangement, maybe including an enhanced travel visa, a 4 way FTA and adding Canada to AUKUS in the near future. From there, who knows?
An interesting note is that this grouping at least has the potential to unite as a single country, whereas the EU doesn’t.
There is no way the French would drop their nationality and become semi-Italian and semi-German. Nor should they. France is a famous old nation and most of her citizens can trace their roots back centuries. Likewise the Italians, Germans, Dutch &c. And the British would never merge with countries against whom our grandfathers fought. The EU is just a business transaction – and even that was too much for us.
It is different for the “CANZUK” nations. We (at least the Anglos) are all from the same stock and most Aussies, Kiwis and Candians have roots in Britain. We are family, whereas the EU countries are just neighbours.
The takeaway appears to be that emotion has trumped reason in Canada. The locals either don’t know or don’t care about Carney’s background and have instead glommed onto the “orange man bad” mentality that grips the American left.
Hello! Orange Man Bad because Orange Man want to eliminate Canada. I say this as one of the few remaining Red Tories from George Grant’s Canada (“Parkin” – George Dunn where are you from? Where does UnHerd find them)
U.S. bashing is always a favored tactic used by Canada and Europe to political ends. Pierre Trudeau loved to chastise Regan for lacking a moral backbone.
Carney, Captain Canada? Not. In his acceptance speech he basically said ‘everything in his past career(s) has lead him to this new found role of Captain Canada’…which goes something like this,
Goldman Sachs, Dept. of Finance Canada, Governor of the Bank of Canada, Governor of the Bank of England, WEF Group of 30, UN special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance, Global Financial Alliance for Net Zero, Stripe, Bloomberg LP, Brookfield and the world of Assets Under Management, ESG, Net Zero and DEI are Carney’s past world.
Carney never ran Brookfield, Bruce Flatt does and did. Carney was at Brookfield because he was well connected globally and during his time ESG/Net Zero and DEI were all the rage and he was a big proponent of it, all the while entrenched at the top/elite levels of the UN, WEF.
Interestingly Brett Christophers book ‘Our Lives in Their Portfolios’ opens with this quote from Bruce Flatt CEO of Brookfield…..’What we do is behind the scenes. Nobody knows we’re there….‘. I’m not in the world of Brookfield however they are a fascinating Canadian story actually, almost to be proud of.
It is interesting that ESG is definitely on the way out, and at this exact time Carney choose to find a new career in…politics???
Is Net Zero on the way out? The trends are in that direction. The West is running out of money and it’s taxpayers are exhausted with little to show for it all.
Before you have nationalism, you must have a nation. Carney is not a nationalist OR a liberal; Carney is a sanctimonious globalist. “Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies.” –C.S. Lewis
Americans sometimes forget that Canada exists. It’s good to be reminded sometimes. By the way, I think that Canada is now 2.1% Sikh, the highest Sikh population (by percentage) in the world.
I actually think the opposite. Better to fly under the radar than to agitate an ascendant poltical movement in your much stronger neighbor. What happens if Americans start to mirror Canadian anti-Americanism?
What, and boo the Canadian National Anthem at hockey games? I mean, what is more “anti-Canadian” than imposing massive tariffs on Canadian produce?
Americans wouldn’t bother to boo the Canadian national anthem, because they (and I mean this seriously) often forget that Canada exists.
I know you are being serious. The US often forgets that any other countries in the world exist. At least during the Cold War they knew about the Russkies….
The US has around 900 military bases girdling the world. This is some kind of forgetfulness.
“The US has around 900 military bases girdling the world” Which Trump and Maga want to get rid of ( especially the European ones, let Putin worry about it). After all, none of these countries ever says Thank You!
Almost all Americans would say that is far too many. A lot would say that is 900 too many. I’m not that extreme, but I have to believe we could get that down to two digits at least.
900 does sound like a lot, but remember that quite a few of these are just some permanent tents, warehouses, office buildings, training facilities, and landing fields out in the middle of nowhere. Only a smaller number are full-up bases, with thousands or tens of thousands of people on site.
Americans are essentially isolationist and always have been. The elites tried to manipulate the people into internationalism and push it ideologically through the schools and media. All that effort, all the money spent, and it’s still blown up in their faces. They’re finding out what the Russkies found out last century. One cannot change a culture to suit one’s purposes and the attempt to do so usually comes at a cost somewhere down the road.
“imposing massive tariffs on Canadian produce” is also anti American, since Americans pay those tariffs.
Anti-americanism is rampant in the clinton-obama DEM party. All the way back to the 1990s. (Throw in RINOs like the Bushes for good measure.)
This is why there is Donald Trump.
Precisely, well said sir.
Total Nonsense!
They won’t. America First is basic isolationism. The US considers its own needs and interests in its international dealings and the rest of the world can do whatever. The elite international class thought they had tamed America’s isolationist roots, but now it’s back with a vengeance. The people don’t seriously want to invade Canada. Trump talks about annexation like he can just wave a wand but he can’t. Adding states is a complex process that would take months or years and require broad bipartisan support in the Congress and most of the individual states. In today’s environment, it’s pretty much impossible. It’s not going to happen and Trump knows that. He’s pushing emotional buttons. I give Canadians the same advice I give Democrats and the media. You’re being played. Stop taking the bait.
A Carney victory would bring the final nail in Canada’s coffin. And to be clear, his leadership win was far from a landslide if you pull back the curtain and look at the real numbers.
While we’re on numbers. Canada still inspects less than 1% of incoming cargo per the CBSA. There are over 4,000 foreign criminal organizations operating on Canadian soil at the moment per the RCMP (in fact, we even have seasonal ‘criminal tourists’ that come here through the winter months to take advantage of daylight savings time and the long nights that brings), and US border patrol reports that over 1,500 officially designated terrorists were denied entry to the US from Canada last year.
DJT was right to make an issue of the above. It’s too bad Canadian’s themselves are so quick to ignore/discard these facts.
I suspect we will soon be sleepwalking into another four-year Liberal mandate with Carney at the helm. We get what we deserve.
China will continue on as our landlord, and India will continue eating us out of house and home.
Poor Canada. A country whose people and extreme natural beauty I have always admired. However, in Carney you have fallen under the leadership of another one of tho left leaning “Elites”who so comprehensively screwed up Europe and the U.K. over the last thirty years or so. Nothing good will come from his Premiership – just more regulation, bureaucracy and debt. If you value freedom get rid of him at the first opportunity.,
This “nationalist” surge is so comical. Reminds of the tiresome enterprise HR language “we’re all family here”. The whole point of “Canada” is being a services provider for tax payers. The whole point of Canadian immigration policy is to attract reliable tax payers, people having nothing in common, politically, linguistically, culturally. It worked to a point (probably won’t work any longer ) but don’t pretend that this welfare corporation or rather state insurance company is a national community.
These are very astute observations. The Canadians have always been a petty, resentful people, jealous of the people down south. That brain drain to the land of opportunity shows how the smart people in Canada size things up.
Canadians are well aware of who the petty, resentful and jealous people are. At least those Canadians that read UnHerd.
Where is the comment from Jim Veenbas, my favorite Canadian UnHerd commenter?
For 200 years Canadians have gone to sleep every night absolutely without a worry or threat from their behemoth neighbor, who for the last 75 of those years has been the global hegemon. How often in the history of the world has any country been in that proximity to such overwhelming power for so long without having to constantly keep one eye open? Perhaps they would rather be Finland, whose long border actually has been aggressively violated by a neighbor far more ruthless than the U.S.
Canada has been like someone whose house is in a nice neighborhood that suddenly has a family with a teenage boy move into the house next door. Yes, he plays the stereo too loud and comes home late on his noisy motorcycle and is less than respectfully polite. But it could be a lot worse. Think of the folks who live next door to that Putin kid.