Canada is looking for a bigger security role in Asia and has made forging deeper ties with Japan and South Korea a priority. As its defence commitments expand at home and overseas the country is expanding military spending.
“Next year, my defence budget will rise by 27% over this year, and, frankly, in the next three or four years, our defence spending will triple,” Blair said.
Sorry to be a debbie downer here. I’d really love for that to be the case as well.
Alas, there’s precedent for getting rejected for not being European enough: https://notesonliberty.com/2016/04/05/when-europe-rejected-morocco/
As Canada is on a continent even further from the continent of Europe than Morocco was, it’s sadly very easy to see a rejection on those grounds alone.
And being next to Greenland doesn’t help, as Greenland isn’t part of the EU, https://www.thedanishparliament.dk/en/eu-information-centre/greenland-and-the-faroe-islands
Likewise, there’s a source here that says that Saint Pierre and Miquelon is also not part of the EU, https://www.ieom.fr/IMG/pdf/l_outre-mer_francais_et_l_euro_-_bdf_bm_186_etu_7_version_anglaise.pdf
…we have Montreal?
I love Montreal!
Come visit, we have bagels!
Fine then, we’ll start our own EU with beavers and blow!
I can not find a reference now but I thought back in the day (almost a decade ago now) one of the goals of the Trans-Pacific Partnership would have been to lead to a union or confederation between it’s members, akin to how the European Steel and Coal Community eventually became the European Union.
We can ask to join Schengen though, like Iceland.
Ah, that’s brilliant! The dream is back on.