Saturday, February 7, 2026
MARK CARNEY IS PLACING CANADA’S HEAD SQUARELY IN THE MOUTH OF A CHINESE TIGER
MARK CARNEY IS PLACING CANADA’S HEAD SQUARELY
IN THE MOUTH OF A CHINESE TIGER
CANADA’S VERY OWN PRIME MINISTER is playing a very dangerous game of high international politics with one of the world’s most aggressive totalitarian regimes.
In recent weeks, Prime Minister Mark Carney has decided to launch a significant and highly controversial shift in Canadian foreign policy by establishing what the Liberals are now trying to package as “a strategic partnership" with the Chinese Communist Party. This is a significant change, which Carney tries to justify as "taking the world as it is" rather than as we wish it to be – a statement that has drawn intense criticism for potentially compromising Canada's national security. This is happening despite concerns over China’s human rights record and nearly a year after he called China "the biggest security threat" facing Canada.
Carney went on to tell members of the press that "the world has changed" in recent years, and that these new arrangements will somehow set Canada up well for "the new world order". Our more intimate relationship with the Chinese Communist Party, he added, has become "more predictable" than our relationship with U.S. president Donald Trump. He even went so far as to write, in a social media post, that Canada was "recalibrating" its relationship with China’s totalitarian regime, "strategically, pragmatically, and decisively". Make no mistake, this is really happening, however frightening it may sound to those who do not support Liberal party ideology in this country.
As to the economic circumstances that surround all of this, we can – in part - look to the United States. Since taking office for a second time last year, president Trump has imposed tariffs on various sectors, such as metals and automotives, which has led to increased uncertainty for counties like ours that have for so long decided to piggyback on America’s capitalist culture. The North American free trade agreement between Canada, the US and Mexico (USMCA) is now under a mandatory review, with Canada and Mexico having both made clear they want it to remain in place. But the decision to carve out a major new deal with China is a declaration by the Liberals that the future of North American free trade is increasingly irrelevant within the realm of socialist Canadian politics.
Our Prime Minister made some very questionable choices in both Beijing and Davos that may come back to bite him - and all Canadians - by alienating moderate Americans while unwittingly arming authoritarian propagandists. The Liberals have been seen as overly conciliatory towards their new masters, and Mark Carney’s glowing endorsement of Chinese Communist Party propaganda is a steep price to pay in a desperate move to cozy up to Xi Jinping.
The federal Liberals are making no attempts at hiding their moral bankruptcy, and Mark Carney’s latest performances have revealed his government's willingness to appease an authoritarian power. Over the past two decades, China has perpetrated an array of hostile acts against Canadians by sanctioning, threatening and harassing politicians and members of various communities. They have interfered in Canadian politics, weaponized trade for geopolitical purposes, and perpetrated historic levels of espionage and theft of intellectual property. Canada's security agencies continue to identify China as the most capable and persistent strategic threat we face.
With regard to the deal-making on tariffs that came about due to lingering frustration with the United States, our federal government secured a deal where China dropped its own tariffs on Canadian canola seed (from 84% to 15%), lobsters, and crabs. In exchange, we cut our 100% tariff on Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) to 6.1% for up to 49,000 vehicles annually. A new memorandum of understanding aims to increase Canadian exports to China, and to explore Chinese investment in Canada’s energy sector (as if that prospect can be seen as somehow helpful to our country). The proposed partnership even includes "pragmatic engagement" on public safety, such as law enforcement cooperation on narcotics trafficking and cybercrime. Don’t hold your breath.
The whole thing offers a dangerous new precedent, because economically, Canada matters very little to most Chinese firms. The real prize for the Chinese Communist Party is not access to Canadian markets, but the spectacle of America's neighbour kowtowing to Beijing. It sets an embarrassing benchmark for future negotiations by enhancing totalitarian propaganda that the free world is now entirely vulnerable.
Worst of all, the EV component of these deals is positively frightening. The deal will see Canada ease tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles that it imposed in tandem with the U.S. in 2024. As one might expect, the reaction was swift, with some, like Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe hailing it as "very good news". Farmers in his province have been hard hit by China's retaliatory tariffs on Canadian canola oil, and the deal, he said, would bring much needed relief.
But here in Ontario – home to Canada’s auto sector - Premier Doug Ford was sharply critical of the deal. He said removing EV tariffs on China "would hurt our economy and lead to job losses". In a post on X, Ford said Carney's government was "inviting a flood of cheap made-in-China electric vehicles without any real guarantees of equal or immediate investment in Canada's economy". He’s right about that, and you can rest assured the electric vehicle provisions in the trade deal will ultimately help China make considerable inroads into our domestic automobile market.
With the lower EV tariffs, approximately 10 per cent of Canada's electric vehicle sales are now expected to go to Chinese automakers. The Liberals under Mark Carney have signaled to the rest of the world that they’re now warming up to China, and the fallout has only just begun. All signs point to the end of Canada’s domestic automotive industries, and there’s no denying that reality.
To put it simply, if countries like ours continue to treat negotiations with the Chinese Communist Party as being an intelligent and strategic move – one that buy’s us time to restructure a weakening economy - our future sovereignty will be compromised. The Liberals are poorly placed to resist being coerced by the Chinese, and Mark Carney's rhetoric in Davos will ultimately be seen as a not-so-sophisticated moral compromise for accommodating totalitarianism.
At the end of the day, words alone do not confer moral authority or defend sovereignty. It's up to every concerned Canadian to ensure our Prime Minister doesn’t let Canada’s collective head get bitten off, because – as Winston Churchill used to say – you can’t negotiate with a tiger when your head is in its mouth.
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