Davos, Mark Carney and Trump
Digest more
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's landmark speech tells us a lot about the future of climate and energy geopolitics.
Canadian PM Mark Carney's approval rises to 60% after a positive Davos speech, while rival Pierre Poilievre sits at 36%. Speculation grows on snap elections.
David Coletto, the boss of Abacus Data, a polling firm, reckons Mr Carney probably amassed domestic political capital with his Davos speech, a rallying cry to stand up to Mr Trump, which plays well with most Canadians.
When he spoke at Davos this week, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney referenced a 1978 essay by Vaclav Havel, written when Czechoslovakia was under Soviet control.
The Nation on MSNOpinion
Mark Carney Knows the Old World Is Dying. But His New World Isn't Good Enough.
World / The Canadian prime minister offered a radical analysis of the collapse of the liberal world order. His response to that collapse is unacceptably conservative. Jeet Heer Nobody would ever call Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney a charismatic speaker.
The Canadian prime minister spoke of ‘an era of great power rivalry,’ and suggested the US-led world order was over, which was seen as a rebuke of President Donald Trump’s efforts to acquire Greenland
Rave reviews for the Canadian prime minister are giving way to fears about the continental trade deal.
Mark Carney clearly hopes a new global world order may emerge that’s not only more resilient to diverse and unpredictable threats, but is more honest and just.
What did PM Mark Carney's speeches in Davos and Quebec mean? Not every expert agrees the widely acclaimed messages were without flaws.