New Canada PM Carney Says There’s Progress in US Trade Talks

3 months ago


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Mark Carney has been sworn in as Canada’s 24th prime minister, bringing the former central banker to power in the middle of an explosive trade war with the US.

The 59-year-old took the oath as Canada’s new leader at a ceremony in Ottawa on Friday, five days after Liberal Party members voted overwhelmingly for him to replace Justin Trudeau as head of the party.

In his first news conference as prime minister, Carney told reporters there has been “progress” in discussions with President Donald Trump’s administration, after weeks of hostilities that have resulted in each country placing tariffs on tens of billions of dollars of the other’s exports.

“I respect what he is looking to accomplish,” Carney said of Trump.

“We’ll both be looking out for our countries,” he added. “He knows and I know from long experience that we can find mutual solutions that win for both.”

Carney appointed a cabinet that was smaller than Trudeau’s and will have a shorter lifespan, as an election is expected within weeks. He tapped Francois-Philippe Champagne to be his finance minister and moved Dominic LeBlanc to international trade, while keeping Melanie Joly as his foreign minister and David McGuinty as public safety minister.

“Canada’s new government will be action-oriented, driven by a smaller but highly experienced team made to meet the moment we are in,” Carney said. “First, protecting Canadian workers and their families in the face of unjustified foreign trade actions. And second, growing this great country by putting more money in Canadians’ pockets.”

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The ex-Goldman Sachs banker’s rise to the country’s top office is remarkable for a number of reasons. He is the first Canadian prime minister to get the job without ever having held a seat in the House of Commons or Senate, except for the country’s very first prime minister in 1867, who was appointed shortly before its first election.

He also assumes the role at the most difficult moment in Canada-US relations in recent history. Trump has threatened to use “economic force” to try to turn Canada into a US state and has already imposed steep tariffs on many Canadian goods, with Canada retaliating in kind. The escalating trade tensions between the countries have already hampered business and consumer spending plans. Additional tariffs expected next month have the potential to plunge Canada into a recession this year.



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