The U.S. Constitution includes
an open invitation for the accession of Canada into the U.S. as a state. The
invitation was made before Canada spread across from the Atlantic to the Pacific
oceans. So, were Canadians to seek statehood in the American union of states
(i.e., the U.S.A.), they would have a good argument for Canada being split in
to a few states rather than just one. This is qualitatively different than a “merger”
between the two countries; the latter ideological conjecture is predicated on a
category mistake. Such a mistake would say, for example, that Singapore and
China are of the same genus politically even though the former is a city-state
and the latter is on the (early modern) empire-scale. Just because both
Singapore and China have foreign policies and are member-countries of the UN
does not mean that a city-state is to be treated more generally as if it were
the same as an empire. By “empire,” I am referring to China itself, rather than
any territories it might have beyond mainland China. The Qing emperor Kangzi
expanded mainland China to include some central Asian kingdoms, thus making
China an empire (of kingdom-level/scale subunits). Similarly, the U.S., as well
as the E.U., are empire-scale/level polities of (kingdom-level) polities,
whereas Canada does not have enough such polities to qualify as being on the
empire-scale, for an empire contains many kingdom-level polities.
When the U.S. federal
constitution was written, Canada consisted of Lower Canada, which was
French-speaking, and Upper Canada, which is present-day Ontario. There were
also maritime colonies to the east. It makes sense, as Ontario hardly stretches
across the continent to present-day British Columbia, that the American
delegates at the Constitutional Convention in 1787 would naturally view both
Upper and Lower “Canada” together as being equivalent to an American republic
being represented at the convention, both in terms of population and extent of
territory. However, that Upper and Lower Canada were so culturally different,
with different languages being predominant in each, had I been at the
convention, I would have urged the other delegates to offer statehood as two
states rather than just one. Different states having different languages is
of course well-known in the E.U., and even in the U.S., German was just
narrowly—by one vote—voted down as the official language of Wisconsin by its
legislature. Even today, “brats and beer” have a cultural meaning in Wisconsin
(e.g., grilled on the lakeside terrace just outside the Rathskeller bar at
the University of Wisconsin) that simply does not exist in Illinois, even just
miles from the northern border. Imagine if German were the official language of
Wisconsin; the cultural differences between the two American republics would be
even greater; but I digress.
When U.S. President Trump
broached the idea that Canada could join the U.S. as the 51st state,
some government officials at the state level in the E.U. displayed their abject
ignorance of what the U.S. was and is by correcting Trump by insisting that
Canada joining the U.S. would actually be a “merger” of two sovereign
countries. Actually, each of the states in the U.S., as well as those in the
E.U., are semi-sovereign and hold residual sovereignty (whereas the U.S. and
E.U. have only delegated, enumerated powers/competencies). Neither Texas nor
France is a sovereign country anymore, for both have agreed to delegate some governmental
sovereignty to the federal system represented by federal governmental
institutions. So the presumptuous, dismissive tone used was actually like primped
arrogance on stilts during a flood, and in a Nietzschean sense be viewed as a
manifestation of the will to power from resentment rather than as a factual statement.
So, when the prime minister of Canada visited the White House in October 2025, Euronews lied that the “US president even made a joking reference to a ‘merger’ between the two countries.”[1] He would not have used the “merger” to refer to Canada becoming a state. The European journalist was writing as an act of power to reduce the US as if it were equivalent to an E.U. state. Canada is not a united states; neither is Mexico. When an official from the British consulate of Chicago spoke at the University of Wisconsin in the 2000s, before Britain had seceded from being an E.U. state, I asked him about how the possible accession (not merger!) of Turkey would affect the European Union. He replied that it would be like Mexico becoming the 51st state. He was implicitly rejecting the view that Mexico would merge with the U.S., even though Mexico had incorrectly adopted the nomenclature, “The United States of Mexico.” France or Belgium or Germany could call itself a united states, but those republics are nonetheless states in the E.U., which is equivalent, as an empire-scale union of states, to the U.S.
1. Malek
Fouda, “Trump
Says There Is ‘Natural Conflict’ with Canada as He Hosts PM Mark Carney at the
Oval Office,” Euronews.com, October 8, 2025.