In a move that surprised few but delighted many, the United States, Mexico and Canada have agreed to temporarily shelve their trade wars and border spats in order to co-host the 2026 World Cup. The announcement, made in a joint press conference that felt more like a truce than a tournament launch, explicitly cited Britain’s long-standing tradition of football diplomacy as a model. It is a curious inversion of roles: the former colonial power teaching the New World the art of using sport to paper over political cracks.
The agreement came after months of fractious negotiations over tariff disputes and immigration policy. Yet when the football heads spoke, the suits listened. The three nations committed to a streamlined visa process for fans, shared security protocols and a joint marketing campaign. The tone was set by the US Soccer Federation president who said, “If the UK can host Euro 2020 across 11 countries while dealing with Brexit, we can manage three.”
On the streets of Manchester, where I happened to be when the news broke, the reaction was a mix of bemusement and pride. “They’re copying us, then,” said a taxi driver, half-smiling. “At least someone’s getting something right.” But beneath the jingoism lies a deeper truth: football has become the last arena where nations can cooperate without political baggage. For the average fan in the stands, the World Cup is about pies and penalties. For the politicians, it is a chance to manufacture goodwill.
The human cost of this diplomatic gesture is less clear. Migrant workers in Mexico, already nervous about the tournament’s demands, wonder if promises of fair wages will be kept. Canadian indigenous groups have protested the use of their lands for stadiums. American cities vie for the honour of hosting matches while struggling with homelessness and infrastructure decay. The football kicks off, but the social fissures remain.
What Britain offers is a template of managed contradiction. We host the world’s biggest club matches while our grassroots pitches crumble. We export Premier League glitz while local leagues struggle for funding. The new World Cup alliance is a mirror: shiny on the surface, messy underneath. For now, though, the three nations will bask in the glow of a shared goal. Whether that goal leads to lasting harmony or just a temporary ceasefire is the question every fan, and every citizen, will be asking come 2026.










