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Trump wants Canada as 51st US state: Why this would be disastrous for Republicans
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  • Trump wants Canada as 51st US state: Why this would be disastrous for Republicans

Trump wants Canada as 51st US state: Why this would be disastrous for Republicans

the conversation • January 7, 2025, 14:01:33 IST
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After Justin Trudeau resigned, US President-elect Donald Trump reiterated that Canada would benefit from becoming the 51st American state. But if Trump has his wish, it will be bad news for Republicans, who may never win a general election. Here’s why

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Trump wants Canada as 51st US state: Why this would be disastrous for Republicans
US President-elect Donald Trump with outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. File image/AP

Since his re-election, Donald Trump has drawn plenty of attention for neo-annexationist propositions made on social media about the Panama Canal, Greenland and Canada — including in the hours following Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s resignation announcement.

For a supposed anti-interventionist, it’s odd that Trump is enthusiastically embracing ideas from the era of intense American imperialism.

Maybe that’s what Trump is going for. Perhaps he is trying to revive the expansionist spirit of Theodore Roosevelt, William McKinley and James Polk.

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Canadians who paid attention to their history lessons will sense some neo-Polkism in these designs — a “ 54-40 or fight” call for the 21st century.

Mild responses

Not surprisingly, Trump’s annexation propositions have been rebuked by the leaders of Panama, Greenland and Canada, some more forcefully than others. Canada’s response has been mild at best.

Outgoing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the man Trump now routinely mocks as the governor of America’s 51st state, counter-posted a video from 2010 in which an avuncular Tom Brokaw explains Canada to Americans.

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Trudeau and Canada’s Cabinet ministers have also sought an audience with the president-elect at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida to find a way around Trump’s ruinous tariff threats, a far greater threat to Canada’s national interests than his annexation bluster.

President-elect Donald Trump has called for a US-Canada merger hours after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tendered his resignation from the post. File image/AP
President-elect Donald Trump has called for a US-Canada merger hours after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tendered his resignation from the post. File image/AP

Some Canadians may have favourable views of the United States but vanishingly few are interested in Canada becoming a 51st state.

Still, let’s play out Trump’s hypothetical. Let’s say that Canada became the 51st state in the American Union. What would be the electoral implications for the US?

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Democrats would benefit

Trump and his Republican Party would certainly not like the answer: the GOP might never win a national election ever again. Indeed, the “state of Canada” would profoundly alter the electoral map of American national politics, almost entirely in the Democratic Party’s favour.

To see how, consider how the 51st state would be represented in the institutions of American government.

Let’s begin in the House of Representatives because that’s where integrating Canada would be the trickiest. In the US, House seats are allocated on the basis of representation-by-population, which, based on the 2020 US census, means one House seat for every 761,169 people.

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With its population of 41 million, Canada would be apportioned about 54 seats, becoming a bigger state than California. Combine those 54 House seats with the two senators allocated to every state, and you would have an electoral powerhouse north of the 49th parallel. None of this would be good news for Republicans.

Of course, this assumes that annexation can overcome American political fights over reapportionment and redistricting and that Canada would accept the American constitutional and legal formula for allocating seats that would whittle 338 House of Commons seats down to 54 and its 105 senators down to two. But it doesn’t matter.

Most Canadians would vote Democrat

Let’s look now at how Canadians would alter American elections. Grafting Canada’s political culture onto US party politics would be awkward, so let’s make another assumption. Presume that Conservative Party of Canada voters would vote Republican and left-of-Conservative voters would vote for Democrats.

Generally, this would include supporters of the Liberals, New Democrats, Greens and the Bloc Québécois.

Here’s where the 51st state becomes a big problem for Trump. Since Canada’s right-wing parties united in 2003, the Conservative Party of Canada has won an average of 35 per cent of the popular vote. Canada’s left-of-conservative parties, on the other hand, have won an average of 63 per cent of the vote in that time period.

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In American terms, that means about two-thirds of voters in the state of Canada would vote Democrat and one-third would vote Republican, or 36-18 in the Democrats’ favour.

Looking back over the past quarter century, that margin would have turned every Republican House majority into a Democratic majority (except for 2010). Indeed, left-of-conservative voters in the state of Canada would make it far more difficult for Republicans to win a House majority ever again.

In the Senate, two-thirds of Canada’s left-of-Conservative voters would likely send a pair of Democrats to the Senate. That’s not enough to alter the balance of power, but in a world of single-digit margins of victory in the Senate, it’s not trivial. After all, every senator counts, especially for things like Supreme Court and cabinet confirmations.

Canadianising the Electoral College

Now comes the big question: how would the state of Canada alter the Electoral College?

Each state has Electoral College votes that are the sum of their House representatives and senators. We also know ( with some exceptions) that the winner of the popular vote in each state takes all of that state’s Electoral College votes. Where would the state of Canada’s 54 Electoral College votes go?

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Given Canada’s left-of-conservative leanings, the state of Canada’s Electoral College votes would likely go to the Democrat presidential candidate every time. That would have swung two Republican presidential victories in the Democrats’ favour this century (2000 and 2004) and would have made Trump’s victories in 2016 and 2024 even smaller — so small, in fact, that American electoral math in the expanded US would be fundamentally changed.

So perhaps it’s time for Trump to recognise that Canada is a different country with its own history and political culture. Better yet, Trump could recognise that his churlish taunts trivialize a needless trade war that risks hundreds of billions of dollars and thousands of jobs on both sides of the border.

Trump could recognise that the countries he is antagonising are part of a strategic network of allies that sustains American power in the world. If that’s not enough for Trump to act seriously, he could at least follow his electoral instincts.

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Aaron Ettinger, Associate Professor, International Relations, Carleton University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Canada Donald Trump Justin Trudeau United States of America
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