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The former central banker successfully convinced voters that he was the right candidate to confront President Trump’s trade war and threats to annex the country.
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Canada Elects Mark Carney as Prime Minister
Mark Carney of the Liberal Party spoke to supporters on Tuesday after being declared the winner of Canada’s election.
“Who’s ready to stand up for Canada with me? America wants our land, our resources, our water, our country. Never. President Trump is trying to break us so that America can own us. That will never — that will never, ever happen.” “I would like to congratulate Prime Minister Carney on leading this minority government. No, no — we’ll have plenty of opportunity to debate.” [music: “Your Man” by Down With Webster]
April 29, 2025Updated 6:20 a.m. ET
Prime Minister Mark Carney led his Liberal Party to a narrow victory in Canada’s pivotal election on Monday, securing a fourth term in power for the party and a renewed mandate to lead the fight against President Trump over trade and the nation’s sovereignty.
Mr. Carney, a former central banker who was running for office for the first time, struck a combative tone toward the United States during his acceptance speech in the early hours of Tuesday at a Liberal Party event in Ottawa.
It was unclear whether the Liberals would win a majority of seats in the next House of Commons, which would allow Mr. Carney to govern relatively unimpeded, or if his government would need to rely on smaller parties to support his legislative agenda.
Carney promises to face up to Trump.
Mr. Carney has not met Mr. Trump in person since becoming Liberal Party leader and prime minister last month. But he made Mr. Trump’s menacing comments about making Canada the 51st state and the tariffs he has imposed on Canadian goods the center of his campaign.
The two men held what was described as a professional call before the election, though Mr. Carney said during the campaign that Mr. Trump had brought up the 51st state threat during that conversation.
Mr. Carney has said that he will maintain Canada’s retaliatory tariffs against the United States. But he has cautioned that expanding them would harm Canadians more than they would pressure Americans.