It is a curious thing to watch a nation celebrate its 250th birthday and feel, from across the Atlantic, a surge of warmth rather than envy. Yet that is exactly what the polls suggest. A new survey reveals that 80 per cent of Britons support a stronger alliance with Canada. Not just a trade deal. Something deeper. A recognition of shared roots, a nod to the crown, a sense that in a turbulent world, the old ties matter more than ever.
I rang a few people. Not the pundits. The ones in the pub. ‘They’re our cousins,’ said a retired teacher in Bristol. ‘They’ve got the Queen on their money. We should be closer.’ It was a sentiment echoed across the demographic lines. Young, old. North, south. The data shows a quiet affection that has been there all along, obscured by the noise of Brexit and trade negotiations.
Why now? Perhaps it is the American Bicentennial that triggered it. Canadians, in their understated way, wished the United States a ‘fearless’ 250th. A lovely word. Fearless. It suggests courage without aggression. And it made Britons look northward with renewed interest. We see in Canada a version of ourselves that is somehow more polite. More sensible. With better healthcare and worse weather.
But there is a human cost to this sentiment, if you want to call it that. A cost of nostalgia. Every time we talk about the ‘special relationship’ with Canada, we are quietly admitting that the one with America has frayed. That costs jobs, diplomacy, a sense of place in the world. For the average person on the street, it means a shift in who they regard as their closest ally. It means learning about Canadian geography beyond Toronto and Vancouver. It means wondering if Tim Hortons tastes better than it looks.
I spoke to a woman in Manchester whose daughter moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia. ‘She says it’s like Scotland but with more snow. She feels safer there.’ Safety. That word came up a lot. In a world of uncertainty, the idea of a stable, friendly, English-speaking nation with its own brand of royalism is comforting. The polls reflect a desire for an anchor.
Yet we must be careful. Sentiment without substance can lead to disappointment. The trade talks, the travel agreements, the cultural exchanges: these need to follow the emotion. If they do, we might see a genuine shift in the axis of the Anglosphere. If they do not, we are left with a warm feeling and a cold reality.
For now, let us raise a glass. To Canada. To the Queen. To 250 more years of fearless friendship. And to remembering that sometimes, the best alliances are the ones we have taken for granted.









