Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

A Border Wall With Canada? No Way, Says Donald Trump

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2016 12:15 PM
    WASHINGTON — Donald Trump wants a wall on the border — just not the northern one.
     
    He dismissed the idea of a wall with Canada during Thursday's televised debate. A moderator from Spanish-language Telemundo asked Trump to justify his unequal treatment of the U.S.'s neighbours — she asked why he insisted on a wall with Mexico, when the northern neighbour might represent a bigger security risk.
     
    ''U.S. officials have warned that it is the Canadian border which is the most significant threat,'' María Celeste Arraras asked, in an apparent reference to terrorism. ''You have said that you will not build a wall in Canada... Isn't that like closing the front door, and leaving the back door open?''
     
    Another presidential candidate fumbled a similar question a few months ago. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker was asked whether he'd consider a northern wall. He appeared to entertain the idea, and was ridiculed for his answer. He withdrew from the presidential race shortly thereafter.
     
    Trump, however, shut it down immediately Thursday. He suggested two reasons for rejecting a northern wall: It would be too long and expensive, and it was unnecessary.
     
    ''With Canada, you're talking about a massively long piece. You're talking about a border that would be about four times longer,'' Trump said. 
     
     
    ''It would be very, very hard to do — and it is not our biggest problem. I don't care what anyone says. It is not our big problem.''
     
    The exchange occurred in a debate where Trump faced increasingly sharp attacks from his rivals, with Super Tuesday approaching and the opportunities to derail his campaign growing scarcer.
     
    He said the southern wall could be built quickly, and repeated his vow that Mexico would be arm-twisted into paying for it. Mexican politicians have ridiculed the idea — former president Vicente Fox recently used a curse word to describe Trump's proposal.
     
    ''We have far less problem with that (northern) border than we do with our southern border,'' Trump said. ''You go to New Hampshire, the first thing they talk about is heroin and drugs pouring in... They're pouring in from the southern border.''
     
    Trump had made a similar statement last summer to the CBC. Thursday's question from the Telemundo journalist, however, was the first time he was pressed on a presidential debate stage to explain why his wall plans were limited only to Mexico.
     
    In Thursday's debate, Trump faced increasingly aggressive attacks from his rivals. 
     
    Sen. Marco Rubio, for instance, accused Trump of hypocrisy for employing illegal workers; raised the fact that his business venture Trump University was being sued by disgruntled ex-students; and suggested he'd never have amounted to anything if he hadn't been given his father's real-estate empire.
     
     
    ''If he hadn’t inherited $200 million, you know where Donald Trump would be right now?'' Rubio asked. 
     
    ''Selling watches in Manhattan.''
     
    Trump responded with a few ad-hominem jabs of his own.
     
    He said Rubio knew nothing about business, and in an interview after the debate commented on his rival's sweatiness — concluding that he'd be too nervous to deal with other leaders like Russia's Vladimir Putin.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Transit Authorities Step Up Fight Against Graffiti Vandalism

    Canadian Transit Authorities Step Up Fight Against Graffiti Vandalism
    Canadian municipalities have been accelerating the fight against graffiti by requiring new transit vehicles to contain built-in protections to minimize the street art considered an urban scourge by some.

    Canadian Transit Authorities Step Up Fight Against Graffiti Vandalism

    'It's A Blessing,' Says Halifax Mom Of People Offering To Donate Kidney To Baby Boy

    'It's A Blessing,' Says Halifax Mom Of People Offering To Donate Kidney To Baby Boy
    Ashley Barnaby said Tuesday that she has received overtures from people as far away as Columbia who say they are willing to donate a kidney to help her son, 18-month-old Zaccari Buell, 

    'It's A Blessing,' Says Halifax Mom Of People Offering To Donate Kidney To Baby Boy

    Regina Pathologist Says Heart Failure Cause Of Girl's Death, Starvation A Factor

    Regina Pathologist Says Heart Failure Cause Of Girl's Death, Starvation A Factor
    Dr. Shaun Ladham is the final prosecution witness in the trial of a Regina couple charged with second-degree murder in the girl's death.

    Regina Pathologist Says Heart Failure Cause Of Girl's Death, Starvation A Factor

    Student Documentary About Troubled La Loche Resurfaces In Wake Of Shooting

    Student Documentary About Troubled La Loche Resurfaces In Wake Of Shooting
    One of the creators of a six-year-old documentary about troubled La Loche, Sask., says he hopes the film can shed light on the social problems faced by the town's residents.

    Student Documentary About Troubled La Loche Resurfaces In Wake Of Shooting

    Young Boy Tells Regina Trial Adults Taped Little Girl's Hands To Wall

    Young Boy Tells Regina Trial Adults Taped Little Girl's Hands To Wall
    A 14-year-old boy has testified he saw a four-year-old girl's hands being taped to a wall at the home of the caregivers who are accused of killing her.

    Young Boy Tells Regina Trial Adults Taped Little Girl's Hands To Wall

    Al-Jazeera Sues Egypt Over Raids And Arrests Of Journalists, Including Mohamed Fahmy

    Al-Jazeera Sues Egypt Over Raids And Arrests Of Journalists, Including Mohamed Fahmy
    CAIRO — Al-Jazeera is suing Egypt over its crackdown on the Qatar-owned broadcaster's activists and reporters, including Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy, following the 2013 overthrow of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

    Al-Jazeera Sues Egypt Over Raids And Arrests Of Journalists, Including Mohamed Fahmy