the mayor urged folks to buy canadian, wear the maple leaf with pride, and fly the flag this weekend, as five former prime ministers this week urged canadians to do.
“do all the little things that send signals that we won’t be taken advantage of by a bully,” dilkens said. “stand tall. be proud to be canadian, but please — and i know this can be hard — don’t boo at the u.s. national anthem.
“we are better than that, and we like our u.s. neighbours too much to hold them accountable for the actions of a single american.”
dilkens remains positive about windsor’s long-term economic outlook. in addition to the $6-billion nextstar energy electric vehicle battery plant and its 2,500-plus jobs, the city has welcomed 39 new major investments and expansion projects since 2023, he said. those business investments will create about 2,700 more jobs and “generate over $830 million in capital spend within our community.”
he noted that the windsor area posted the best business conditions index score in canada last summer, according to statistics canada, and that the conference board of canada has windsor outpacing major canadian cities with the highest rate of gdp growth per capita.
the mayor acknowledged other local challenges. windsor’s unemployment rate remains “stubbornly high,” and “major cost-of-living pressures” are “squeezing household budgets,” making affordability a top issue for many.