Since Donald Trump’s presidency, the construction of an impenetrable wall at the US-Mexico border has become a common refrain among conservative politicians.
But one Republican presidential hopeful, Vivek Ramaswamy, wants to take the idea even further. His proposal: A wall along the 5,500 mile long (8,900km) US-Canada frontier.
At Wednesday’s primary debate in Miami, the 38-year-old candidate argued that enough fentanyl crossed the border last year to “kill three million Americans”.
His calls to tackle the trade by building a colossal border wall were quickly panned by experts.
On stage at the presidential debate, Mr Ramaswamy claimed that the US should “build both walls” to stop the flow of drugs into the US.
His claim follows an earlier visit to the Roxham Road crossing in Quebec, where he claimed the heavily forested border is “wide open for invasion” and easily crossed by traffickers and illegal migrants.
But statistics show that the scale of fentanyl trafficking along the US-Canada border – the world’s longest – pales in comparison to the US-Mexico border.
According to data from US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), just under two and a half pounds – about a kilogram – of fentanyl was seized at the Canadian border in the 2023 fiscal year.
The figure represents well under 1% of the 26,718 lbs (12,119kg) of fentanyl seized at the southern border during the same timeframe.
The previous fiscal year, the figures stood at 14lbs (6.3kg) along the Canadian border, compared to 14,104 lbs (6,397kg) along the US-Mexican border.
Additionally, the statistics show that about 189,400 migrant “encounters” were reported at the US-Canada border in the 2023 fiscal year, compared to 2.47 million along the border with Mexico. The previous year, only 2.7% of migrants apprehended at the same border were taken into custody between ports of entry.
“You can’t compare the borders… when he said that yesterday, I kind of laughed,” Dr Frederick Gagnon, an expert on US-Canada relations at the University of Québec in Montreal, told the BBC. “What he proposes seems very extreme.”
While Mr Ramaswamy’s proposal quickly caught the eye of Canadian journalists and political commentators, he is not the first US politician to float the idea.
In 2015, for example, then-Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker similarly suggested that a US-Canada border wall was “a legitimate issue for us to look at”.
The response to his comments was both swift and furious, drawing intense ridicule from his Republican opponents. One of them, Kentucky Republican Rand Paul, described it as a “pretty dumb idea” and a “ridiculous notion”.
Even Donald Trump, for whom border security was and remains a key policy platform, dismissed the idea, telling Telemundo in an interview that the US-Canada border is a “massively long piece” and “not our big problem”.
Aaron Ettinger, a professor of US and Canadian foreign policy at Carleton University in Ottawa, said that Mr Ramaswamy’s comments should be taken in the context of the campaign and could be an effort to “localise” border issues for voters far from the US-Mexico border.
“From a politicking perspective, it might be a good way to draw in right-wing voters in upstate New York, Vermont, in the northeast or in rural states across the prairies,” he said. “It might be an effective way of showing that this guy is interested in ‘our’ border, which is kind of the ‘other’ border.”
Source : BBC