"[We had a] constructive [discussion both agreeing to begin comprehensive negotiations on a new economic and security relationship between Canada and the United States] as sovereign nations [immediately following the 28 April federal election in Canada]."
"Look, the president says lots of things, but the essence of the [shared telephone] discussion and where we moved the conversation to was exactly what I said."
"We talked about lots of things, OK? And what's important is the conclusions of the call, the results of the call, and those are exactly the same on the American side and the Canadian side."
"And those were that it was very constructive."
"Who can stand up to President Trump, who can build Canada strong, who has the experience in order to do that?"
"That's the crucial choice that Canadians need to make."
Liberal leader, Mark Carney
 |
U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark
Carney had their first phone conversation on March 28. Sources tell
Radio-Canada that Trump raised the idea of Canada as the 51st state on
the call. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters, Blair Gable/Reuters) |
"I'm not their strategist, I'm not imagining wild conspiracies, but I can imagine that it serves them."
"Liberals are [juggling[ between pretending that Mr. Carney has extinguished the threat [of Trump annexing Canada] and regularly resurrecting that threat because fear has been their main argument at the start of the Liberal campaign."
Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet
Mark Carney, smug and self-confident that he will win Monday's general election to become elected Prime Minister of Canada, is accustomed to manipulating the truth to his advantage. He evades the truth, preferring to replace it with his version of events that are likelier to portray him as he feels he should be viewed; superior, entitled and exceptional. In that way, as in so many others he is the mirror-image of the man he intends to replace, former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Mr. Carney has already established a track record of unethical behaviour; the most notable one to be brought to the attention of an electorate prior to the ballot, is his having ethically invalidated his doctorate by the expedient of casual plagiarism. More latterly, he denied having had any hand in moving Brookfield Asset Management headquarters from Canada to the United States, at a time when he was still its head. Nor seeking out a tax haven for Brookfield to avoid paying taxes directly in Canada.
Now it has been revealed that in his March 28 telephone conversation with President Trump, the threat of annexing Canada to the United States had come up, even as Mr. Carney later claimed publicly that President Trump "respected Canada's sovereignty". Radio-Canada had reported that Mr. Trump had indeed brought up the idea of Canada as the 51st state during their exchange. Mr. Carney sought to exploit his version of events to portray himself as a strong leader whom the American President respected enough to avoid speaking of annexing the country.
 |
Liberal Party
Leader Mark Carney says his phone call with U.S. President Donald Trump
on Friday morning was very ‘cordial’ between two leaders of two
sovereign nations. Carney says Trump respected Canada’s sovereignty both
in his private and public comments on Friday. CBC News |
"To be clear, as I've said to anyone who's raised this issue in private or in public, including the president, it will never happen", Mr. Carney said at an election stop in British Columbia; that under his leadership the threat to annex Canada by economic force would never come to pass. What Mr. Carney also failed to reveal about the conversation with President Trump was his having alerted the American president that as part of his electoral campaigning, he planned to use the threats as fuel to inspire fear in Canadians to enhance his claims that he was the right person to lead Canada.
Accordingly, in a cooperative gesture, Trump's own read-out of the call with Carney saw him dial back talk of Canada as the 51st state. And nor has he spoken dismissively of Carney as the "governor" of Canada. He obviously finds more in common with Carney's business/banker approach to government than that of Justin Trudeau's commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion. If nothing else, Trump reacts to blustery confidence and he hasn't done his homework on Carney for whom DEI, a green agenda and a commitment to quash Canada's natural resources in energy are a driving force.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt denied a change of stance had occurred on the annexation of Canada; that President Trump still "believes that Canadians would benefit greatly from becoming the 51st state of the United States of America". During a signing ceremony at the Oval Office last week Mr. Trump said that Canada "would cease to exist as a country" if the U.S. stopped buying its goods and that Canada "as a state, it works great".
"He has these things in his mind. This is not news."
"He raises it all the time. But then the question is, what's going to be done with it? And does he understand where we stand?"
"More particularly, where do I stand? He is under no illusions."
Mark Carney, aspirant to the leadership of Canada
 |
U.S.
President Donald Trump has warned that 25 per cent tariffs against
Canadian-made cars could go up. He also expressed his desire to make
Canada the 51st state after a period of relative quiet on his annexation
threats. CBC News |
The latest and newest revelations of Mr. Carney's failure to respect the truth and relay it to the public at a time when voters are entitled to know exactly what it is they are voting for and for whom as a candidate most likely to act in Canada's best interests during an economic slowdown of recession proportions, during a time of provincial alienation in response to the Liberal government's decision-making impeding their decision making on energy extraction, when society in general has been politically fractured, and the country's social services and universal health care network is facing collapse, marks a failure of leadership.
Instead, during the campaign Carney has portrayed himself as a Canadian hero during the economic downtown of the 1980s when as Governor of the Bank of Canada, he lead Canada out of a recession; when in fact it was not he but then-Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and the Canadian banking system that saved Canada. During a recent press conference, the man who has never been elected to public office, but who aspires to govern a nation, when asked about the need for ethics and transparency laws in government, responded that he would have no problems distinguishing between rules and conduct:
"If there were specific proposals, obviously we would look at them."
"But what's important is bringing that spirit of honesty, the highest integrity, and my track record is consistent with that, but also that commitment that goes with it to transparency."
Liberal leader Mark Carney
"I wasn't there [so cannot verify the heads-up Carney gave to Trump]."
"But what's clear is that we will stand up for our sovereignty, we will never be an American state, and we will focus on what we can control, which is to reverse the disastrous Liberal economic policies that Mark Carney advised Justin Trudeau to take."
Conservative leader, Pierre Poilievre
 |
Conservative
Leader Pierre Poilievre, when asked about a Radio-Canada report saying
U.S. President Donald Trump mentioned ‘51st state’ during a call with
Prime Minister Mark Carney, said his Liberal rival will have to explain,
and he reiterated his call to defend Canada’s sovereignty and focus on
things Canada can control. Carney previously said Trump ‘respected
Canada’s sovereignty’ during the conversation. CBC News |
Labels: 28 April 2025, Canadian General Election, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre Can Rescue Canada, Liberal Leader Mark Carney, Recession Agenda, U.S. President Donald Trump