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My Take
Opinion
Alex Lo

My Take | Canada cannot decouple from China or de-risk from the US

Winning a full-term premiership is the easy part for Mark Carney, who must now lead a country squeezed between two rival superpowers

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Canada’s Liberal Leader and Prime Minister-elect Mark Carney in Ottawa on March 9, 2025. Photo: AFP via Getty Images
Alex Loin Toronto

By securing a full term as Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney’s election victory says a lot about the interesting times that we – both Canadians and non-Canadians – live in. Like the other English-speaking Commonwealth countries, he faces a United States that is no longer their protector but predator, and a China that is both a threat and a trade partner.

Still, Carney has much to thank Donald Trump for. Without the bombastic US president who vowed to make their country America’s 51st state, thus angering Canadians, Carney probably would never have become prime minister.

Trump couldn’t keep his mouth shut even before the last voting day by repeating his promise to make Canada part of the US.

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As an unnamed Carney adviser was quoted in the news, “Trump is the gift that keeps on giving.” But that’s also a whole new reality for Canadians – an openly hostile America.

Carney is now facing many of the same challenges as his Anglo counterparts – Keir Starmer in the UK and Anthony Albanese in Australia where the latter may secure a Carney-like election win this weekend, again thanks to Trump’s provocations. All three are being squeezed between the two rival superpowers. They could talk tough against China when Uncle Sam was on their side. Now they are on their own and have to learn a new trick like the rest of the world – how to balance interests and threats between Washington and Beijing.

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Three-quarters of Canadian exports are shipped south of the border; China is Canada’s second-largest trading partner. When asked about that, he talked tough and hinted that there were trade alternatives. “There are huge opportunities in Europe, in Asean, Mercosur, other parts of the world,” he said.

But like many other countries, it’s practically impossible to divorce from your Nos 1 and 2 trading partners. Neither decoupling from China nor derisking from the US is really an option.

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