- The Washington Times - Tuesday, December 3, 2024

If Donald Trump wants to make Canada part of the U.S., as he jokingly suggested last week to Canada’s prime minister, he’ll have an ally on the Democratic left. But with a price.

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, an acknowledged socialist, said he’d welcome America’s northern neighbor into the union along with the president-elect if the Canucks were to bring their health-care system here.

“Does that mean that we can adopt the Canadian health care system and guarantee health care to all, lower the cost of prescription drugs, and spend 50% less per capita on health care?” he asked on X, responding to a news report on Mr. Trump trolling proposal.



“I’m all for it,” said Mr. Sanders, who long has been a champion of Canadian-style socialized medicine.

When Mr. Trump made his perhaps-trolling proposal last week to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the context of a discussion of tariffs, he was “warned” about Canada exporting left-wing politics to the U.S.

Someone else at the table, whom Fox News did not identify in its initial report, noted that Canada would be a deep-blue state that would probably elect liberals and leftists. Were it a U.S. state, Canada would be the most populous, though only slightly ahead of California.

When that got a big laugh, Mr. Trump downplayed such an Electoral College “threat.”

“Trump suggested that Canada could possibly become two states: a conservative and a liberal one,” Fox News wrote.

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• Victor Morton can be reached at vmorton@washingtontimes.com.

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