A curious bulletin crossed my desk this morning. British fans travelling to Niagara Falls for the World Cup are being ‘urged’ by a government-adjacent tourism body to invest in UK-friendly ventures. Not to simply enjoy the mist. Not to take a selfie by the Horseshoe Falls. But to back hospitality businesses with British ownership or supply chain ties. It is, on the surface, a nudge. A gentle encouragement to ‘spend wisely’. But peel back the froth, and you find something more telling about how we now view leisure: as an act of national loyalty.
Let me be clear. No one is banning anyone from buying a maple-leaf keyring. No one is checking receipts at the border. This is a soft-power campaign, wrapped in the language of ‘community’ and ‘cultural exchange’. Yet it betrays a deeper shift. For decades, Brits abroad have been free agents, chasing bargains and cheap lager. Now, in the midst of a cost-of-living crisis and a post-Brexit identity hangover, the holiday pound has become a political instrument.
The timing is deliberate. The World Cup draws crowds not just for football, but for the tribal rituals that surround it. Pubs, fan zones, curry houses. Places where identity is performed. To ask a British fan to seek out a British-owned bar in Niagara Falls is to acknowledge that tourism is never just about dollars. It’s about soft diplomacy, about reminding the world that British capital still has reach.
I spoke to a couple from Leeds who had already booked their trip. ‘We go where the beer is cheapest,’ the husband said, ‘but if we can help a British family business, why not?’ It’s a sentiment that would have been unthinkable a generation ago, when package holidays were about escape from home. Now, home follows you. The Union Jack on a pub sign isn’t just a novelty. It’s a comfort blanket.
There is, of course, a human cost to this pitch. Not for the tourists, but for the local workers who rely on seasonal spending. If every British fan funnels their cash into enclaves of Britishness, the Canadian small businesses that line the falls will feel the pinch. And that is the tension at the heart of modern nationalism: how to claim solidarity with your own without erasing the community you’re visiting.
This is not a story about protectionism. It’s about the quiet commodification of identity. The government can’t tell you where to eat, but a carefully worded campaign can make you feel guilty about the wrong kind of fun. The water thunders on, indifferent. But the people on the viewing platform are now carrying an extra weight: the burden of representing Britain with every pint they buy.










