Trump comeback could see familiar faces re-emerge — and they may spell trouble for Canada

North America Democracy

Trump comeback could see familiar faces re-emerge — and they may spell trouble for Canada

The moderates are out, the true believers are in — and some have picked fights with Canada

Evan Dyer · CBC News · Posted: Jul 26, 2024 1:00 AM PDT | Last Updated: 7 hours ago

Former U.S. president Donald Trump, left, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talk prior to a NATO round table meeting in December 2019.
Former U.S. president Donald Trump, left, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, right, talk prior to a NATO meeting in December 2019. Canadians are watching the U.S. election campaign with more than their usual mix of trepidation and fascination, as it careens from a near-miss assassination attempt on one candidate to an unprecedented step-aside from the other. (Frank Augstein/AP Photo)

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Canadians are watching the U.S. election campaign with more than their usual mix of trepidation and fascination, as it careens from a near-miss assassination attempt on one candidate to an unprecedented step-aside from the other.

Two-thirds of Canadians say a second Donald Trump term would be either ‘”bad news” or “terrible news” for Canada, according to a poll of 1,435 adults conducted by the Angus Reid Institute.

(The online poll was conducted over the four days following the shooting in Butler, Pa., and has a margin of error of +/- 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.)

“It’s not just about the Canada-U.S. relationship, although there’s a significant amount of anxiety and pessimism around that,” pollster Shachi Kurl told CBC News.

“There’s also the prospects for what happens in the United States, what happens around Ukraine and U.S. support for Ukraine and the broader NATO relationship. Does that continue to hold together or does it come apart? [There are also] issues around the continuing fight on curbing greenhouse gas emissions.”

A majority of respondents said a second Trump term would be negative for global stability (68%), U.S.-Canada relations (65%), the unity of the United States (67%), the fight against climate change (67%) and Canada’s economy (60%).

“So across a number of domestic Canadian, U.S. and international issues, there is that sense of anxiety and unease,” said Kurl.

“The word we used is dread, and it is palpable among Canadians.”

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