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[VIDEO] Mark Carney - Canada's 24th Prime Minister Performance Thread

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Mark Carney recently replaced Justin Trudeau as the prime minister of Canada.

This thread is about his performance as the PM.

His background: He was previously the governor of Bank of Canada and also governor of Bank of England.
 
Man was a disastrous BOE governor who encouraged money printing en masse. UK is still paying for the consequences!
 
Time for Canada to become Kanneda.

Our Khalistani brothers will make Canada great again

Who are with me in supporting Jaggu bhai?
 
Pierre Polievere (can't ever get spelling right) is a snake oil salesman. His history suggests he will do the opposite of helping with inflation.

Then throw in the fact that he has a lot more in common with Trump and will more easily bend the knee.

Hoping it's an easy victory for the liberals. Would have preferred NDP but liberals are better anyday over the sleazy conservatives. The timing with the things going on with Trump couldn't have been better for liberals though, I will give them that. But then conservatives should ask the question why they are not trusted vis-a-vis Trump.
 

End of an era for Canada-US ties, says Carney, as allies worldwide decry Trump’s car tariffs​


Canadian PM says Donald Trump has permanently altered relations, as countries around the globe insist import taxes are harmful to all, including Washington

Canada’s prime minister has said the era of deep ties with the US “is over”, as governments from Tokyo to Berlin to Paris sharply criticised Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on car imports, with some threatening retaliatory action.

Mark Carney warned Canadians that Trump had permanently altered relations and that, regardless of any future trade deals, there would be “no turning back”.


He told reporters: “The old relationship we had with the United States based on deepening integration of our economies and tight security and military cooperation is over.”

Flight bookings between Canada and US down 70% amid Trump tariff war
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The prime minister called Trump’s car tariffs “unjustified”, and said they were in breach of existing trade deals between the countries.

Carney said he would speak to provincial premiers and business leaders on Friday to discuss a coordinated response, with retaliatory measures expected next week.

“Our response to these latest tariffs is to fight, is to protect, is to build,” Carney said. “We will fight the US tariffs with retaliatory trade actions of our own that will have maximum impact in the United States and minimum impacts here in Canada.”

Trump announced on Wednesday that he would impose a 25% tariff on cars and car parts shipped to the US from 3 April in a move experts have predicted is likely to depress production, drive up prices and fuel a global trade war.

The US imported almost $475bn (£367bn) worth of cars last year, mostly from Mexico, Japan, South Korea, Canada and Germany. European carmakers alone sold more than 750,000 vehicles to American drivers.

France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, said on Thursday he had told his US counterpart that tariffs were not a good idea. They “disrupt value chains, create an inflationary effect and destroy jobs. So it’s not good for the US or European economies,” he said.

Paris would work with the European Commission on a response intended to get Trump to reconsider, he said. Officials in Berlin also stressed that the commission would defend free trade as the foundation of the EU’s prosperity.

Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, bluntly described Trump’s decision as wrong, and said Washington appeared to have “chosen a path at whose end lie only losers, since tariffs and isolation hurt prosperity, for everyone”.

France’s finance minister, Eric Lombard, called the US president’s plan “very bad news” and said the EU would be forced to raise its own tariffs. His German counterpart, Robert Habeck, promised a “firm EU response”. “We will not take this lying down,” he said.

Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, said Europe would approach the US with common sense but “not on our knees”. Good transatlantic relations are “a strategic matter” and must survive more than one prime minister and one president, he said.

The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, described the move as “bad for businesses, worse for consumers” because “tariffs are taxes”. She said the bloc would continue to seek negotiated solutions while protecting its economic interests.

The British prime minister, Keir Starmer, said the tariffs were “very concerning” and that his government would be “pragmatic and clear-eyed” in response. The UK “does not want a trade war, but it’s important we keep all options on the table”, he said.

One option for Canada is to impose excise duties on exports of oil, potash and other commodities. “Nothing is off the table to defend our workers and our country,” said Carney, who added that the old economic and security relationship between Canada and the US was over.

South Korea said it would put in place a full emergency response to Trump’s proposed measures by April.

China’s foreign ministry said the US approach violated World Trade Organization rules and was “not conducive to solving its own problems”. Its spokesperson, Guo Jiakun, said: “No country’s development and prosperity are achieved by imposing tariffs.”

The Japanese prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, said Tokyo was putting “all options on the table”. Japan “makes the largest amount of investment to the US, so we wonder if it makes sense for [Washington] to apply uniform tariffs to all countries”, he said.

Reuters and Agence-France Presse contributed to this report

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...ry-trump-car-tariffs-and-threaten-retaliation.

 
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