Canada’s Mark Carney to visit India, Japan and Australia to expand trade partners
Stewart Prest, Lecturer, Political Science, University of British Columbia Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is having a moment. Accordingly, on his visit to India, Japan and Australia, Carney is looking to find partners for his vision. He’s seeking opportunities to improve relations, expand trade and cooperate on issues of Pacific security. While every leader in the world has to grapple with the abrupt and arbitrary decision-making of United States President Donald Trump, few have had to do so with such high stakes as America’s neighbour and ostensible ally to the north. With more than two-thirds of Canadian exports bound for the US, bilateral trade is a matter of economic life and death for Canada. Since his return to office in January 2025, Trump has made repeated references to Canada becoming America’s “51st state” in an effort to put economic and political pressure on its northern neighbour. Despite this, Carney has met the challenge with rare candour. In his recent speech at this year’s World Economic Forum in Switzerland, Carney gave the world a word for the transformations now underway, describing a “rupture” in the international rules-based order. The speech was remarkable in its honesty on other fronts, as well. Effectively, Carney acknowledged what everyone knows, but no one in a position of power has previously admitted: even before Trump’s return to the White House for a second term, the US-led liberal international order was deeply unfair in its distribution of prosperity and security. Carney’s pedigree Why was Carney able to say what others would not, or could not, on such a high-profile stage? In many ways, his background and present role give him unique credibility in the eyes of the wealthy and powerful who gather each year at Davos. Born and raised in northern and western Canada, Carney’s academic and professional career played out on […]
