Latest news with #travelboycott


CTV News
6 days ago
- Business
- CTV News
‘We really miss having our Canadians around': New data shows substantial drop in B.C. cross-border travel
The days of British Columbians flocking to the United States for summer vacation appear to have ended, for now. New data from the Border Policy Research Institute in Bellingham, Wash., shows in July there was a 29-per-cent drop in Canadian vehicles entering the U.S. at the Peace Arch and Pacific Highway crossings, year-over-year. The institute's director Laurie Trautman explained to CTV News that there was a nearly 30-per-cent decline in February, before cross-border traffic fell as a far as 50 per cent in April. Last month, her data showed there were around 5,000 fewer Canadian vehicles compared to July 2024, and the institute estimates two to three people per car. Numbers like these have rarely been seen over the last 30 years, except during the pandemic and other border-closing events. 'We saw drops after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, but again that was because people weren't able to cross,' said Trautman. 'There's really no other situation.' According to International Trade Administration foreign travel is down across the United States. The World Travel and Tourism Council projects the country is on pace to lose $12.5 billion in international visitor spending this year. Birch Bay the exception? The small American-Canadian border town of Birch Bay appears have avoided the effects of the travel boycott. The local Chamber of Commerce says the town has seen an influx of domestic tourists from Washington and out of state. 'We're seeing a lot more of what I call 'U.S regional business,'' said Sacha Sanguinetti, the event co-ordinator for the Birch Bay Chamber of Commerce. The C Shop has been in business in Birch Bay since 1971 and has been a staple for tourists to visit and pick up a sweet homemade treat. Over those years, Keith Alesse and his family have watched waves of changes, including the pandemic, but have always adapted to stay afloat. This year, they have watched the number of B.C. licence plates in their parking lot vanish. 'We really miss having our Canadians around,' said Alesse. Business remains steady despite the lack of Canucks stopping by. Alesse says revenue has only dropped around 2 per cent year-over-year. Alesse understands the cross-border tension and is hoping for a resolution between the two countries quickly. He's also hopeful Canadians will return when that day comes.

Wall Street Journal
15-06-2025
- Politics
- Wall Street Journal
Meet the Canadians Breaking Up With Their Beloved Maine Vacation Spot
George Poitras says he felt nostalgic for Old Orchard Beach the first time he visited as a teen. 'I'd like to show this to other people,' he recalls thinking of the Maine town and its smooth, sandy beaches. Later, he'd bring his three children for vacations to share 'pier fries' and ride amusement park rides on warm summer nights. This year, though, the seaside town where he and thousands of other Canadians come each summer is caught in a political maelstrom. The neighborly relationship between the two countries went south after President Trump threatened to make Canada the 51st U.S. state and hit it with tariffs. In response to the trade moves, then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called for Canadians to boycott U.S. travel and singled out Old Orchard Beach by name.


Irish Times
25-05-2025
- Irish Times
Direct flights to Cancún may say more about the US than Mexico
The turquoise blue water along a sun-drenched Mexican beach is a more appealing prospect than a hostile US border agent. If the comparison seems a bit of a stretch, just ask the Canadians; they've been ditching stateside vacations in their droves recently, in favour of a trip farther south. Now that Aer Lingus has confirmed it will fly directly to Cancún next year, the unprecedented route may prove a timely litmus test for the appetite of Irish tourists and their relative reluctance to visit the US, at least these days. The carrier will service direct flights to the eastern coastal resort, long popular with Irish people, three times a week from January. Famous for its tropical beaches, party vibe, food and sights, the destination has no need to sell itself. But how might it compete with other North American destinations? If Irish tourists follow the lead of the Canadians, the Cancún route may prove to be fortuitous timing for Aer Lingus. READ MORE Earlier this month it emerged that Canadians, angry at the policies of president Donald Trump , were conducting something of a US travel boycott. The number of their residents visiting Mexico climbed 15.6 per cent in March compared with the same month in 2024. The Trump administration's threats of annexation and trade levies triggered a patriotic reaction, strengthened in turn by reports of harsh treatment towards tourists entering the US. Ireland has had its own similar experiences. Visitor numbers from the Republic to the US fell 27 per cent in March when compared with the same month in 2024, according to data from the US International Trade Administration (ITA). It was a similar pattern across Europe. There has been much talk of late about US customs and border protection officers' ability to trawl through passenger phones to see what they might be up to on social media, a disturbing new reality of travel that is likely to put some people off. And given Trump's most recent tariff salvo against the European Union – promising 50 per cent on all imports by June, and who knows what per cent by the time this column reaches print – it is anyone's guess what EU-US relations might look like when Aer Lingus's first Mexico flight touches down south of the border.


Irish Times
09-05-2025
- Business
- Irish Times
Angry Canadian tourists snub US and head to Mexico
Mexico is reaping the benefits of a US travel boycott by Canadians angry at the policies of president Donald Trump, with visitor numbers soaring as airlines add new flight routes into the country. The number of Canadian residents visiting Mexico climbed 15.6 per cent in March compared with the same month in 2024, according to the Mexican secretary of tourism. Canadian air travel to the US fell 13.5 per cent over the same period, while cross-border road trips were down about a third, according to Statistics Canada. Mexico's tourism secretary Josefina Rodríguez Zamora told the Financial Times the figures showed that Canadians were 'opting for friendlier policies' by visiting her country instead of the US. READ MORE 'I think they are choosing more friendly policies,' she added. While Canada has for years been an important tourist market for Mexico, Rodríguez Zamora said ties between the two countries had strengthened in recent months to 'become more like brotherhood'. Mr Trump's threats of annexation and steep new trade levies have triggered a patriotic boycott of American goods and travel in Canada. Reports of harsh treatment towards tourists entering the US have also weighed on visitor numbers from other regions, including Mexico. The number of Mexicans taking flights to the US this March was down by almost a quarter on 2024, the first year-on-year decline since May 2022, according to the US Department of Commerce. McKenzie McMillan, a travel adviser in Vancouver, said he expected a sustained 'boom' in Canadians travelling to Mexico because the boycott of US travel in Canada was 'only intensifying'. He said his clients were committed to swapping beach holidays in California and Florida for trips to Cancún and Cabo, and trading city breaks in New York for Mexico City – at least for the duration of Mr Trump's term. Some airlines have trimmed back the number of flights from Canada to the US in favour of its southern neighbour. Air Canada and Montreal-based Air Transat this week both announced new nonstop flights to Guadalajara, and said they would also increase the frequency of their winter services to other destinations in Mexico, including Los Cabos and Puerto Vallarta. This redirection in travel flows could be beneficial for Mexico's economy which is in the middle of a sharp slowdown, with tourism having made up 8.6 per cent of GDP in 2023. The IMF is predicting Mexico will fall into recession this year – in part because of Mr Trump's tariffs. Tourism growth also slowed last year, but has remained above that of the broader economy. 'The best way to describe it is a state of resilience in an uncertain environment,' said Francisco Madrid, head of the sustainable tourism advanced research centre at Anáhuac university in Cancún. The number of nights booked in Mexico by Canadian users on short-term letting platform Airbnb increased 27 per cent between March 2024 and March 2025. Bookings in the US, meanwhile, dropped 12 per cent. Hotel booking platform Trivago said a decline in Canadian searches for accommodation in the US had been offset by rising interest in domestic travel and a 20 per cent year-on-year jump in searches for Mexico in the three months to March. Online travel agency said searches in Canada for accommodation in Mexico City were up 49 per cent in April, compared with the same time last year. Interest in beach destinations Cancún, Sayulita and Playa del Carmen jumped almost a fifth. Mexican hotel operator Grupo Hotelero Santa Fe forecast strong occupancy rates for 2025 as Canadians and Europeans 'look at Mexico more than the US' due to Trump's aggressive tariff policy, said vice-chair Francisco Zinser. Hyatt, one of the world's largest hotel chains, reported stronger resort demand 'in the non-US Americas', including 'increases in Canadian travellers into Mexico and the Caribbean', chief executive Mark Hoplamazian said on an earnings call last week. US vacation hotspots are meanwhile struggling to lure back visitors from the country's largest international tourist market. California governor Gavin Newsom launched a marketing campaign in April inviting his 'neighbours up north' to visit a state that's '2,000 miles from Washington'. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited