Presidents and prime ministers: How cross-border personality clashes could play out
WASHINGTON — President John F. Kennedy stood before Canadian lawmakers elucidating the important relationship between the two countries: “Geography has made us neighbours. History has made us friends. Economics has made us partners.”
“And necessity has made us allies,” Kennedy said in a 1961 address to Parliament.
But behind the scenes, the relationship between the charismatic Kennedy and then-prime minister John Diefenbaker was toxic.
With the looming United States election, the future of who will be at the helm of the bilateral relationship remains unclear, but Canada cannot escape the geopolitical pull of its closest neighbour.