Canada, Trump and G7
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Canada is preparing to host the G7 summit. Prime Minister Mark Carney aims to reshape Canada's global image. Discussions will include trade tensions, new alliances, and Canada's role in a changing world.
The province’s secessionists are gaining ground, contesting the prime minister’s desire to project national unity.
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Carney welcomes U.K.'s Starmer ahead of G7 summitWorld leaders are arriving in Kananaskis ahead of the start of the G7 summit in Alberta on Sunday. But before the summit, Prime Minister Mark Carney welcomed U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer to his home for a private dinner on Saturday.
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Canada will meet NATO’s military spending guideline by early next year and diversify defense spending away from the United States, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Monday, asserting that Washington no longer plays a predominant role on the world stage.
Britain and Canada will seek to revive stalled trade negotiations, Sir Keir Starmer has indicated ahead of a meeting with Mark Carney in the lead-up to a major international summit. The Prime Minister said the world’s “changing” economy means Britain must aim to reduce barriers with other allies as he flew to Ottawa for the first visit by a UK leader to the country in eight years.
Mr. Carney’s frequent refrain is, “We can give ourselves far more than the Americans can ever take away.” It’s a pleasing idea: Mr. Trump’s asinine trade war can spur Canada to finally fix the weakness we’ve been limping around on for decades, and in doing so, at least partly fill in the economic crater left by the big orange guy’s blast radius.
Mark Carney said he sees opportunity for Canada to build a new pipeline to ship more oil to foreign markets, if it’s tied to billions in green investments to reduce the industry’s environmental footprint.
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a boost in Canada’s defense budget and said spending would reach NATO’s target of 2% of gross domestic product by the end of the country’s fiscal year.
Michael Sabia will add Clerk of the Privy Council to his resumé of senior corporate and government posts after the chief executive of Hydro Quebec was tapped by Prime Minister Mark Carney to lead Canada’s civil service starting July 7,