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The Canadians Who Say: ‘Trump, Take My Country—Please!’
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The Canadians Who Say: ‘Trump, Take My Country—Please!’
When the weather is clear, Ryan Hemsley can look across the Strait of Juan de Fuca, see the Olympic Mountains in Washington State, and fantasize about becoming an American. (Rick Collins for The Free Press)
More than 10 percent of Canadians want the new president to make good on his troll. Rupa meets the people sick of life under Trudeau.
By Rupa Subramanya
12.27.24 — The Big Read
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The Canadians Who Say: ‘Trump, Take My Country—Please!’
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OTTAWA—Every day, just before sunset, 33-year-old Ryan Hemsley heads to Clover Point, a scenic stretch along the southern coast of Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada’s westernmost province. When the weather is clear, he can look across the Strait of Juan de Fuca and see the Olympic Mountains in Washington State.

“Subconsciously, there’s something that keeps bringing me here every day,” Hemsley told me. Watching the Seattle ferry return to the U.S., his thoughts drift to an unlikely fantasy.

“How can I be a stowaway so I can be an American?” he said.

Hemsley insists he has no intention of crossing the border illegally. But when president-elect Donald Trump recently referred to the “great state of Canada,” while trolling Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a “governor,” and claiming that “many Canadians want Canada to become the 51st state,” it struck a nerve.

Canada’s top officials universally said Trump was joking. Hemsley, on the other hand, saw potential. Recently, he said, his country has become stagnant, a place where ambition dies and potential is squandered. Despite earning a decent living as a car salesman, he can’t afford to buy a house or plan for a future.

“You wake up and survive,” he said. “There’s no opportunity for growth. You occasionally go out for dinner with friends, have a good night, but then you go home, sleep, and do it all over again.”

“As much as I love Canada,” he said, “Canada becoming the 51st state of the United States would rejuvenate me.”

“Canada becoming the 51st state of the United States would rejuvenate me.” (Rick Collins for The Free Press)
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Rupa Subramanya

Rupa Subramanya is a writer based in Ottawa, Canada. She began her writing career at The Wall Street Journal India with a weekly column focusing on the intersection of economics, politics, and public policy. Her work has been cited in The New York Times, Financial Times, and The Guardian among others. She is a former columnist for the National Post.

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