‘Canada is not for sale’ hat makers want to share domestic manufacturing tips
OTTAWA — One of the people behind the viral “Canada is not for sale” hat says he wants to help other companies get on board the made-in-Canada train.
Liam Mooney told The Canadian Press he and his fiancée and business partner Emma Cochrane felt distraught watching Ontario Premier Doug Ford tell U.S. President Donald Trump and American media in early January that — the president’s musings about annexation notwithstanding — Canada would never be for sale.
A few days later the Ottawa-based pair, now married, stitched together a hat bearing the premier’s message. Mooney called it a “creative rebuttal” in a form familiar to Trump.
But after a year of learning the ins and outs of domestic manufacturing — and seeing the lengths Canadian firms have to go just to get their products on local store shelves — Mooney said his goal in 2026 is to spread the “Canada is not for sale” ethos.


