The commercial pulse that Ottawa does not swallow
Mark Carney does not give in. The Canadian Prime Minister came out this Tuesday to clear up any doubts: what he said in Davos about the economic coercion of the great powers, he maintains. And he made it known directly to Donald Trump in a recent phone call.
“I meant what I said in Davos,” Carney said upon arriving at a cabinet meeting in Ottawa.
The statement is a direct rejection of the versions of the US Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, who had assured that the Canadian leader had retracted in an “aggressive” manner. Nothing could be further from the truth, according to Ottawa.
A strategy to not be ‘on the menu’
Carney stressed that Canada was one of the first countries to perceive the change of course in Washington’s trade policy. For this reason, his government is already working on a plan B.
The strategy seeks to reduce dependence on the United States by signing a dozen new trade agreements on different continents. A direct response to a more uncertain global environment, full of tariff threats and diplomatic tensions.
Carney’s words come just after Trump threatened to impose 100% tariffs on Canadian products if Ottawa moved forward on a trade deal with China. The prime minister was quick to clarify: there are no negotiations for a comprehensive pact with Beijing, only limited adjustments in some sectors.
But the central message was already launched at the World Economic Forum. There, Carney called on the medium powers to act together in the face of pressure from the strongest, using a phrase that summarizes the current times well:
“If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.”
This tough stance has raised the prime minister’s international profile, but has also added an extra layer of tension to the bilateral relationship. And all this occurs on the eve of the review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement scheduled for this year. The game is served.




