Polls show Americans dislike Canada while Canadians dislike America That's bad news for the trade war
Carney is constrained because ‘there’s a point at which Canadians aren’t going to accept big concessions … until they get an apology’ from America, a foreign affairs observer in Washington says.
WASHINGTON,
D.C. — Canadians’ affection for the United States tends to rise and fall with
whoever’s in the White House. It dropped for president George W. Bush, rose for
Barack Obama, and then plunged during Donald Trump’s first term, only to rise
again with Joe Biden. In the first year of Trump’s second presidency, however,
Canada’s fondness for its southern neighbour has plumbed new lows.
Also new is
that Americans’ views of Canadians have also made a historic shift — for the
worse. According to a Gallup poll out this month, while most Americans see
Canada favourably, that has dropped from 91 per cent to 80 per cent, the lowest
level Gallup has seen since the 1980s.
“During
the first Trump administration, (Canadians’) views of the United States
definitely plunged,” said Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus Reid Institute
polling firm.
“But this,
today, is a whole new dynamic.”
Only one in
five Canadians now view the U.S. positively, reports an Angus Reid survey released last month, while 74
per cent see it unfavourably or very unfavourably. Nearly four in 10 see it as
an enemy or threat, which is unprecedented.
Angus Reid
has found that 51 per cent of Americans say Canadian products should not be tariffed. But among
Trump supporters, it’s just 21 per cent.
There is a
stark partisan division. Positive views of Canada have held steadily high among
Democrats at 95 per cent, according to Gallup. But Republicans’ positive views
dropped from 85 to just 62 per cent over the past year — and among
Independents, the number has dropped nine points from 2024 to 80 per cent.
Trump’s
trade war and “51st state” rhetoric are almost certainly a major factor. But
political scientists point out that most voters pay very little attention to,
or understand much about foreign policy.
“I don’t
think many Americans really have very negative views about Canada or
Canadians,” said Erik Voeten, professor of geopolitics at Georgetown
University.
“I really
think this is just a follow-the-leader kind of thing.”
Trump’s
rhetoric, he added, “shapes these views, but I don’t think that reflects really
deep-seated sort of feelings that people have towards Canada per se.”
Daniel
Béland, a Canadian political sociologist and director of McGill’s Institute for
the Study of Canada, agreed, comparing the feelings to affinity with a local
sports team.
“You
identify with your team, especially in a hyper-partisan context,” he said,
adding that it’s especially true among less-educated voters, who are more
likely to take their cues from a political leader’s policy.
“People
rally around the flag when they feel that they are under threat … it’s just
basic social psychology. It tends to reinforce inner-group solidarity,” Béland
added.
Christopher
Sands, director of the Center for Canadian Studies at the Johns Hopkins School
of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C., said the Canadian
numbers reflect a sense of betrayal by longtime American friends.
For
Canadians, he said, it’s “more about trust and friendship. I think those are
the things that are the biggest stake.”
The effect
is also self-reinforcing.
“If you say
negative things about the country, in the case of Trump about Canada,” said
Béland, “then your voters will expect you to be tougher in a way.”
So deepening
divisions may soon shape policy, constraining both Trump and Prime Minister
Mark Carney in their ongoing trade talks.
“If
Canadians are down on the U.S., that might constrain the options available to
the government,” said Jeffrey Jones, senior editor at Gallup.
“Policies
that maybe they (Canadians) see are beneficial to the U.S. and not as
beneficial to Canada, maybe that wouldn’t fly.”
Many global
leaders are faced with the same conundrum, where the actions by the
U.S. president are unpopular with their domestic populace. But Georgetown
University’s Voeten noted that on the other side is the awareness among
businesses and politicians that the U.S.-Canada relationship is economically
crucial.
“So at some
point, you need to make some concessions. That’s a balancing act that I’m sure
Carney will have to manage.”
Nonetheless,
Canada faces limits in how far it can go with Washington, according to Sands,
who said Carney is a “very smart guy, but not a career politician,” so he may
lack the political charisma needed to bring Canadians along with him if big
concessions need to be made.
The
hardening views, he said, “operate like cement shoes for Carney,” noting that
he’s constrained because “there’s a point at which Canadians aren’t going to
accept big concessions … until they get an apology” from America.
People
rally around the flag when they feel that they are under threat … it’s just
basic social psychology
But while
the growing hostility might make it harder for Ottawa to make concessions, Kurl
said that “what it really does is it emboldens and bolsters Canada if they want
to take a hard line” in trade talks.
High
approval ratings, mixed with the potential for achieving a majority in
Parliament after April’s byelections, give Carney more cover to play hardball
or make concessions, said Béland. Polls measure Carney’s approval ratings as over 60 per cent, while Trump’s hover
around the high 30 per cents.
Carney’s
numbers have only risen despite having so far failed to show any progress on his
election promise a year ago to “win” the trade war with the United
States.
And Béland
thinks Canadians will continue to give Carney lots of latitude.
“For the
time being, many Canadians trust Carney to basically adapt to the situation and
be pragmatic,” he said.
As in the
past, when Canadians have cooled on their neighbours, warmer feelings for
America are likely to return once Trump leaves office, but most expect it will
take longer than usual — and depend on who the next president is.
Sands noted
that a lot of damage has been done to Canadian trust.
“Trust is
the ultimate thing that has been destroyed,” he said, “And there’s no way to
get that back except incrementally — not by pledges, but by performance.”
https://nationalpost.com/news/americans-dislike-canada-more-than-ever-polls
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