Berliner Boersenzeitung - New PM Carney says Canada will never be part of US

EUR -
AED 4.007398
AFN 76.991326
ALL 99.247491
AMD 426.218844
ANG 1.965344
AOA 998.390733
ARS 1164.930737
AUD 1.712474
AWG 1.966775
AZN 1.882987
BAM 1.956342
BBD 2.20181
BDT 132.496701
BGN 1.956878
BHD 0.411137
BIF 3231.495103
BMD 1.091137
BND 1.452102
BOB 7.535087
BRL 6.20377
BSD 1.090502
BTN 94.684227
BWP 14.827107
BYN 3.568789
BYR 21386.289861
BZD 2.190507
CAD 1.560735
CDF 3137.019646
CHF 0.961663
CLF 0.026336
CLP 1010.629938
CNY 7.892417
CNH 7.894176
COP 4444.474754
CRC 543.950671
CUC 1.091137
CUP 28.915137
CVE 110.244009
CZK 25.062332
DJF 194.19379
DKK 7.460509
DOP 68.62901
DZD 145.678855
EGP 55.122728
ERN 16.367059
ETB 143.019515
FJD 2.48845
FKP 0.840381
GBP 0.840907
GEL 3.038801
GGP 0.840381
GHS 16.909308
GIP 0.840381
GMD 78.653687
GNF 9434.179944
GTQ 8.410022
GYD 228.354609
HKD 8.477836
HNL 27.899963
HRK 7.535613
HTG 143.23259
HUF 397.357814
IDR 17851.232608
ILS 3.997
IMP 0.840381
INR 94.606708
IQD 1428.293362
IRR 45933.882192
ISK 145.96633
JEP 0.840381
JMD 170.638794
JOD 0.773642
JPY 163.413046
KES 141.233658
KGS 95.696133
KHR 4364.767242
KMF 491.472006
KPW 981.996926
KRW 1576.712519
KWD 0.335988
KYD 0.90744
KZT 544.160564
LAK 23633.209035
LBP 97709.405045
LKR 323.605779
LRD 218.119231
LSL 19.729795
LTL 3.221844
LVL 0.660018
LYD 5.249153
MAD 10.533291
MDL 19.81805
MGA 5079.170192
MKD 61.548985
MMK 2289.906802
MNT 3790.875533
MOP 8.732334
MRU 43.265193
MUR 49.132389
MVR 16.84859
MWK 1891.124354
MXN 21.805886
MYR 4.851959
MZN 69.705559
NAD 19.729795
NGN 1681.923648
NIO 40.129084
NOK 11.514113
NPR 151.441687
NZD 1.875676
OMR 0.420089
PAB 1.091137
PEN 3.98547
PGK 4.487158
PHP 62.455912
PKR 305.341874
PLN 4.180133
PYG 8671.498452
QAR 3.971951
RON 4.973157
RSD 117.086039
RUB 91.541546
RWF 1547.667585
SAR 4.091346
SBD 9.299606
SCR 15.677774
SDG 655.708307
SEK 11.029329
SGD 1.451299
SHP 0.857463
SLE 24.905219
SLL 22880.603489
SOS 622.94907
SRD 39.927105
STD 22584.337825
SVC 9.547442
SYP 14186.887175
SZL 19.729795
THB 36.650533
TJS 11.929421
TMT 3.815311
TND 3.362157
TOP 2.627768
TRY 40.006749
TTD 7.409017
TWD 35.969627
TZS 2900.114466
UAH 45.282727
UGX 4001.493379
USD 1.091137
UYU 46.51614
UZS 14132.63203
VES 71.180056
VND 27856.121564
VUV 134.45369
WST 3.033814
XAF 655.296008
XAG 0.032146
XAU 0.000362
XCD 2.954063
XDR 0.819116
XOF 655.296008
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.280661
ZAR 19.754827
ZMK 9821.554102
ZMW 31.245162
ZWL 351.345745
  • RBGPF

    66.7800

    66.78

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.9300

    64.14

    +1.45%

  • RIO

    0.4300

    63.47

    +0.68%

  • BCC

    0.6500

    100

    +0.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    11.01

    +0.18%

  • BTI

    0.4800

    41.84

    +1.15%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.33

    +0.47%

  • RELX

    0.6700

    49.6

    +1.35%

  • AZN

    -0.2300

    77.37

    -0.3%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13

    +1.31%

  • GSK

    0.7600

    40.25

    +1.89%

  • CMSD

    0.1900

    23.54

    +0.81%

  • VOD

    0.3100

    9.86

    +3.14%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    10.44

    -0.1%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    23.7

    +0.97%

  • BP

    0.3700

    33.76

    +1.1%

New PM Carney says Canada will never be part of US
New PM Carney says Canada will never be part of US / Photo: Dave Chan - AFP

New PM Carney says Canada will never be part of US

Canada's new Prime Minister Mark Carney on Friday launched his term in office with a whole-hearted rejection of US President Donald Trump's repeated threats to annex his northern neighbor.

Text size:

Shortly after he was sworn in as Canada's 24th prime minister, replacing Justin Trudeau who has been in office since 2015, Carney said confronting Trump's tariffs would be a top priority.

Canada "will never, ever, in any way, shape or form, be part of the United States," he added, while voicing hope his government could one-day work together with Washington to advance both countries' interests.

Officials said they were looking to set up a call between Trump and Carney in the coming days.

Ottawa has been rattled by collapsing cross-border relations since Trump returned to power in January, launching a trade war and demanding that Canada surrender its independence to become the 51st US state.

Ottawa has retaliated against Trump's tariffs, while Canadian public opinion has been outraged as the US president insists the border separating the countries should be erased.

Carney has characterized the Trump administration as the greatest challenge Canada has faced in a generation, and US tariffs on Canadian goods unjustified.

He became prime minister after overwhelmingly winning a Liberal Party vote to replace Trudeau as leader.

But the former central banker, who turns 60 on Sunday, is a political novice who has never won an elected public office.

Carney's campaign skills may be tested soon with government sources telling AFP that Canada is headed for a general election in weeks.

He said he will fly to Paris and London next week, part of an effort to reinforce Canada's alliances overseas as ties with the United States unravel. Those talks will include trade and security.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen -- who said Canada-EU relations were now "more crucial than ever" -- as well as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky were among the first foreign leaders to congratulate Carney on Friday.

- Election upcoming -

Carney was an investment banker at Goldman Sachs before serving as governor of the Bank of Canada during the 2008-2009 financial crisis and also led the Bank of England through the turmoil surrounding the Brexit vote.

He has sought to present himself as purpose-built to lead a country through a trade war with the United States, once Canada's closest ally but now a country that Carney says Canada can "no longer trust."

But he may not be prime minister for long.

Polls ahead of the upcoming vote show a tight race against the opposition Conservatives, who have sought to portray Carney as an elitist and out of touch with the struggles of ordinary Canadians.

He has countered that his global experience, including in the private sector, has equipped him to drive the Canadian economy forward as it faces a rupture with its most important trading partner.

"Carney is arriving at a good time. He has emerged as a figure people seem to trust to take on Donald Trump," University of Winnipeg politics professor Felix Mathieu told AFP.

On the week Trump's sweeping 25 percent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports came into force, Carney visited a steel plant in Hamilton, an industrial city near the US border in the province of Ontario.

Wearing a hard hat and goggles, Carney said he was ready to work out a trade deal with Trump.

But he insisted there must be "respect for Canadian sovereignty" in any negotiation.

Carney has also made clear efforts to distance himself from Trudeau with moves aimed at attracting more centrist voters.

He has said addressing climate change will be a top priority but his first action on Friday was to sign an order scrapping Trudeau's "divisive" carbon tax on individuals and families while pledging to advance market-led solutions.

The cabinet sworn in alongside Carney keeps much of Trudeau's team in place, including those working most closely on trade talks with the United States.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)