Norms Impact
Montreal fans boo American anthem prior to Canada-USA 4 Nations Face-Off game
A shared civic ritual meant to transcend politics was turned into a public taunt, normalizing cross-border contempt in a setting that depends on mutual respect to stay safe and legitimate.
Feb 15, 2025
Sources
Summary
Montreal spectators loudly booed the U.S. national anthem before Canada’s Saturday night 4 Nations Face-Off game against the United States. A routine pregame civic ritual became a venue for cross-border political grievance in front of Canada’s prime minister despite an official request for respect. The immediate result was a more combustible public atmosphere around an international competition, with escalation risks now baked into subsequent stops in the tournament.
Reality Check
When national symbols become a tool for political escalation in packed arenas, we normalize public intimidation and collective punishment that can spill into violence and retaliatory conduct across borders. The conduct described—booing an anthem despite an announcer’s request—does not, on these facts, fit a federal crime; it is protected expression absent threats, disorderly conduct elements, or incitement, and nothing here indicates violations of U.S. statutes like 18 U.S.C. § 875 or Canadian Criminal Code provisions on threats. The real damage is civic: turning a neutral pregame protocol into a sanctioned pressure campaign teaches crowds that rules and restraint are optional when politics intrudes. Once that becomes routine, our public spaces become easier to weaponize, and ordinary people—not leaders—absorb the consequences.
Detail
<p>At the 4 Nations Face-Off game in Montreal on Saturday, fans booed during “The Star-Spangled Banner” and then sang “O Canada” loudly before the Canada–United States matchup. Warrant officer David Grenon of the Royal Canadian Air Force Band performed the anthems, and public address announcer Michel Lacroix asked the crowd to respect both.</p><p>Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was in attendance. After the anthems, the opening nine seconds of play included three fights: Canada’s Brandon Hagel fought U.S. forward Matthew Tkachuk off the opening faceoff; Canada’s Sam Bennett fought Brady Tkachuk on the ensuing draw; and Canada defenceman Colton Parayko fought J.T. Miller seconds later.</p><p>The anthem disruption followed recent booing at other Canadian sporting events amid political tensions tied to U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff actions and public comments about Canada becoming a “51st state.” The tournament shifts to Boston for games Monday and a final next Thursday.</p>