In December 2024, Donald Trump stood at Mar-a-Lago and told Canada’s prime minister that his country should become America’s 51st state.
In the months that followed, he posted an American flag blanketing Canada on Truth Social, called Justin Trudeau “Governor Trudeau,” imposed 25% tariffs, and — as recently as two weeks ago — referred to Mark Carney as “the future Governor of Canada.”
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Canada’s response has been unequivocal. Carney, when asked if the country was for sale, responded, “never, never, never, never, never.”
But while the two governments traded threats, something quieter was happening. Across the United States — in living rooms in Delaware, home offices in Arkansas, kitchen tables in Kentucky — Americans were going in the other direction. Not toward absorbing Canada, but toward becoming Canadian.
The numbers tell the story
Since Bill C-3 took effect in December 2025, expanding Canadian citizenship by descent to anyone who can trace an unbroken line to a Canadian ancestor, demand has surged in a way immigration professionals say they’ve never seen before.
One Ottawa-based consultant told CBC that her American caseload jumped from 10 applications a month to 100 — a tenfold increase. Unlike previous post-election spikes, which she says typically fade by January, this wave has been sustained for over a year. She called the citizenship certificate “the hottest ticket in 2026.”
Quebec’s national archives reported a 3,000% increase in requests for vital records. Archives in New Brunswick, Ontario, and British Columbia are seeing similar surges. The processing queue for citizenship certificates has climbed past 50,000 applicants, with wait times stretching to 10 months.
The applicants, by all accounts, are not who you might expect. Lawyers. Former executives. Doctors. Entrepreneurs. One consultant described them as “the best and the brightest.”
Who’s going — and why
A retired lawyer in Maine — formerly the CEO of her firm — filed her application the week before leaving on an overseas trip. She wanted the process underway before she left the country. She wasn’t fleeing. She was planning. Her cousin and his four adult children followed within days, all tracing their claim through the same ancestor.
A woman in Delaware who spent years working for the Smithsonian Institution and National Geographic. Both institutions have been under pressure from the current administration. She described feeling “increasingly alienated” from the place she’s called home her whole life. When she told her sister she’d applied for Canadian citizenship, the sister’s response was immediate: “Can I do that too?”
An entrepreneur in Arkansas who made a point that cuts against the assumption that this is a coastal, blue-state phenomenon. In his state, 40 to 45% of voters go Democrat — and they have zero political representation. The governor’s office, the legislature, the media landscape: all controlled. “People in blue states think their governor will protect them,” he said. “People in red states are running out of options.”
A retired technology executive in Kentucky. His wife of 30 years passed away. He remarried, and the two of them are traveling the world, rethinking where they want to spend the next chapter. He described wanting to “deepen his ties with the country his family is from.” Not a protest. Not an escape. A return.
None of them are making dramatic declarations about leaving America. Most say they plan to stay. But they want the option — the passport, the right to enter and work in Canada, the knowledge that if things get worse, they have somewhere to go.
Every single one of them discovered they were already Canadian. They just didn’t know it.
The parallel timelines
What makes this moment historically unusual isn’t that Americans are interested in Canada — that happens after every contentious election. It’s that two things are happening simultaneously that have never overlapped before.
On one track: the most aggressive posture toward Canadian sovereignty in modern American history. Annexation rhetoric. Tariff wars. A trade relationship in crisis. Canada drawing up military contingency plans for the first time in over a century.
On the other track: a new Canadian law that, for the first time, allows citizenship to flow through unlimited generations. Millions of Americans suddenly eligible. Archives overwhelmed. A quiet, steady stream of applications from people who — in the middle of all this political hostility — are choosing to become citizens of the country their president keeps trying to absorb.
The irony is hard to miss. Trump says Canada should join America. These Americans are joining Canada instead — not through immigration, not through asylum, but through ancestry. Through a grandmother who left Nova Scotia in the 1940s, a great-grandfather who worked the Quebec mills, and a family name that was once spelled differently.
They’re not protesting. They’re not making headlines. They’re gathering birth certificates.
To check whether you may be eligible for Canadian citizenship by descent, visit CanadaVisa’s citizenship by descent calculator.
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