Balkanada

Crazy Foreigners

The whole Canada thing has gotten me thinking.  While support for independence in Quebec seems be holding steady, or even declining, the potential for a breakup of Canada is still real, if somewhat remote.  But what would actually happen if Canada did break up? 

The first puzzle is what the remainder of Canada would do in the event of a decisive vote for sovereignty in Quebec.  There seems to have been some preparation for this eventuality, and I doubt many in British Canada would really object much to the idea of Quebec going its own way.  The situation would be nothing like that of the southern states seceding in 1861 – there would certainly be no civil war to force Quebec to remain part of Canada.  The likely result, at least in the near term, would be an amicable divorce, in its nature very like the split between the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

The Quebecois and the rest of the Canadians would divvy up the marital assets – military bases, government facilities, and the like.  They would agree to things like free movement of citizens, trade reciprocity, and access to the St. Lawrence seaway for the western parts of Canada.  The opinion of the United States would have to be considered – especially in regard to that last item, seeing as how such a large portion of US trade uses the St. Lawrence seaway as well – it is the only access to the sea for the entire US Great Lakes region, including Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland.  But so long as this was guaranteed, I don’t think the US would really twitch at the idea of the Quebeckers going their own way.

The repercussions of an independent Quebec might move well beyond their own independence.  I can imagine that once the idea of Canada is broken, others who might not have considered secession might find it, well, thinkable.  The obvious candidates in this case would be Alberta, Saskatchewan and British Columbia.  We are told that Canadians in the west have long felt shafted by the elites in the east, whose policies have either taken, or threatened to take, the wealth of the west to be given to the economically disadvantaged in Quebec and the Maritimes, whose economies are not as vibrant, or as well blessed with natural resources.

Alberta, especially – the Texas of the north – might be the first to follow Quebec into secession.  There have been movements for secession there in the past, though not particularly large or successful.  Unlike Quebec, however, with Alberta and the plains provinces, the probability of one or more of these newly independent nations turning around and petitioning the US for statehood would be significant.  And that would raise big questions in the US, which has not admitted a new state to the Union in almost a half century, and the only real parallels would be with Texas and California, more than a hundred and fifty years in the past.  More on that in a minute.

Meanwhile, assume that the unraveling of Canada continues, and gathers momentum.  Quebec started the ball rolling, and Alberta gives it a good kick soon after.  In quick succession, Saskatchewan and British Columbia also declare independence.  The Central government in Ottawa has lost its biggest problem, which is nice.  But it has also lost two of its most prosperous provinces, which means that it will be far less able to make transfer payments to the economically stagnant Maritime Provinces.  Further, it is now geographically separate from them, with Quebec awkwardly positioned betwixt the two parts of the rump Canada.  What will the Maritimes think at this point?  Continuing support from Ottawa might seem to be less and less assured.  Perhaps they, too, would consider independence, followed by a petition for statehood.

The advantages for certain provinces in statehood are in some cases fairly clear.  As Bob and Doug McKenzie put it in the Daily Hoser:

Top Ten Affects if Canada and the United States merged into one nation:


Posted by on 01/25/06 at 03:24 PM in Crazy Foreigners
  1. Again, the relative balance of conservatives and liberals across all the provinces would likely reduce most complaints – something like the way free and slave states were admitted to the Union before the Civil War.

    Ouch!

    Not that I think you’re wrong mind you… but the fact that a thoughtful ‘merican like yourself thinks things have come to this is a terrible, terrible, sign of where things have gone.

    Posted by  on  01/25  at  06:10 PM
  2. Funny - I paused after I wrote that, because I didn’t really mean to make such a strong comparison.  Things really aren’t that bad.

    But then I thought, hey, it’s still the best comparison, both in the sense of procedure and of bile.

    Posted by  on  01/25  at  06:23 PM
  3. ’H’ word!

    Posted by Murdoc  on  01/25  at  06:37 PM
  4. I read somewhere that an independent Quebec would have the world’s largest national debt per capita on day one.  Those kinds of ugly economic realities will probably keep these things from ever happening.

    Posted by  on  01/26  at  11:50 AM
  5. Man, I’m so far behind on all this Canada stuff.  wink Sorry! 

    The separatists have had a couple of referendums and lost them.  Overall support for separatism keeps dropping, overall.  But...with a west-oriented “conservative” party coming into some measure of power, there could be a slight tilt back the other way.

    Separatism strikes me as simple “blaming other people for your problems” crap.

    Posted by  on  01/26  at  01:00 PM
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