Bloomberg Just Called It — Canada Is the EU’s 28th State and Trump Has No Answer
HELSINKI — In a striking public proposal, Finland’s President Alexander Stubb has called for expanding the European Union to 40 member states, explicitly including Canada and describing the country as “mentally part of Europe.”
The remarks, made at a major energy summit, reflect the rapid deepening of ties between Canada and the European Union at a time of strained relations with the United States.
Bloomberg’s Assessment
Three weeks ago, Bloomberg’s influential “Balance of Power” newsletter observed that Canada, while rejecting any notion of becoming the 51st U.S. state, was increasingly behaving like the EU’s 28th member. The assessment captured a shift that has been building steadily over the past year.

Historic Summit Invitation
On May 4, Prime Minister Mark Carney became the first non-European leader invited to the European Political Community Summit in Yerevan, Armenia. The gathering brought together leaders from 47 European nations, underscoring Canada’s elevated status in European strategic thinking.
European Council President António Costa highlighted the invitation as historic, while Mr. Carney positioned Canada as “the most European of the non-Europeans.”
Stubb’s Ambitious Vision
President Stubb went further, suggesting it would be “lovely” if Canada were formally the EU’s 28th state rather than the 51st American one. He listed potential new members including the United Kingdom, Norway, Iceland, Turkey, Ukraine and the Western Balkan states, arguing that geopolitical pressures created a narrow window for enlargement.
Accelerating Partnership
The past year has seen a surge in Canada-EU cooperation. Canada joined the EU’s SAFE defense procurement initiative as the first non-European participant, gaining preferential access with up to 80 percent Canadian content — far exceeding standard third-country thresholds.
This has opened billions in opportunities for Canadian defense firms and aligned Canada more closely with European security priorities.

Trade and Economic Ties
The Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) continues to expand, with full ratification advancing. Canada and the EU have signed new strategic partnerships on security, defense, energy and critical minerals.
These steps are part of Ottawa’s broader effort to diversify away from heavy reliance on the U.S. market.
Response to U.S. Pressures
Canadian officials and analysts link the European pivot directly to ongoing trade tensions with the United States, including tariffs and unpredictable rhetoric from the Trump administration. Rather than deepening dependence, Ottawa has used the pressure as impetus to build alternatives.
Functional Integration
While formal EU membership remains highly unlikely due to geographic and constitutional barriers, Canada is achieving deep integration through defense procurement, trade frameworks, political summits and energy cooperation. Observers describe it as a “Norway-style” relationship — close alignment without full membership.
Geopolitical Implications
The developments represent a significant realignment. Canada is positioning itself as a reliable partner to Europe at a time when transatlantic relations face uncertainty. European leaders have welcomed the engagement as strengthening democratic resilience.
Challenges Remain
Significant hurdles persist. Formal structures for deeper integration would require complex negotiations. Public opinion in Canada remains divided on the extent of European alignment, and U.S. relations continue to dominate economic realities.
Strategic Calculus
Prime Minister Carney has framed the European outreach as pragmatic diversification rather than a rejection of the United States. The goal is greater resilience and leverage, not isolation from North America.
Broader Context
The Bloomberg headline and Stubb’s proposal crystallize a trend that has been accelerating for months. Canada is not abandoning its closest neighbor but is actively building a more balanced set of international relationships.
Future Trajectory
How far this partnership evolves will depend on political developments in Ottawa, Brussels and Washington. For now, the trajectory points toward ever-closer functional ties between Canada and Europe.
The shift underscores a larger truth: external pressure can sometimes produce the opposite of its intended effect. Efforts to pull Canada closer have instead encouraged it to spread its partnerships more widely.
A Defining Reorientation
Canada’s deepening European alignment marks one of the most consequential foreign policy adjustments in its modern history. What began as trade agreements has grown into strategic, defense and political convergence that few would have predicted just two years ago.
Whether this becomes a permanent feature of the global order or a temporary response to current tensions remains to be seen. But the direction is clear, and the momentum continues to build.