‘The biggest risk we have to face Donald Trump’: Canada PM Mark Carney

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Thursday that US President Donald Trump could reduce anything through his ongoing war, as he had made his case for the election again in the final debate before the April 28 vote.
He also called Trump a “greatest risk” to Canada, which came under the backdrop of his aggressive tariff policies and continuous claims to add Canada as the “51st state” of America.
After the resignation of Justin Trudeau last month, Carney has set a target of 1 July to establish free trade between 10 provinces of Canada and three regions. He said that the country’s long -standing internal trade obstacles have stopped economic capacity for decades and a success agreement is already.
“We can give ourselves more than Donald Trump,” Carney said during the debate. “We can have an economy. It is within our understanding.”
Preparing the US President as a threat to Canada’s sovereignty and prosperity, Carney said that the country is facing “the biggest crisis of our lifetime” and has described Trump’s economic strategy as threatening Canada’s great existence.
He defended his government’s ventilative tariff against American goods, saying they are affecting Americans “where it hurts,” and immediately indicated readiness to interact on a new bilateral trade agreement with Trump’s administration.
“We have to face the biggest risk Donald Trump. We have got this right,” Carney said. “I jumped into politics now because I believe that I am best to address what I call the Trump crisis in this dangerous moment.”
Carney’s rise under Trudeau came up rapidly, when Trudeau stepped in the approval ratings, increased life costs and increasing public pressure. Former Bank of Canada and Bank of England Governor Carney won the Liberal leadership and became Prime Minister within weeks.
Opposition conservative leader Pierre poo Demanding voter frustration to the records of the liberal government, arguing that a fourth term would mean more economic difficulty for Canadian people.
“We cannot tolerate a fourth generous word of rising housing costs,” Polyvv said, accusing them of enmity towards the energy sector. He said that he promised to roll back “anti-energy law, red tape and high taxes”.
But Carney used Trudeau’s absence to distance himself from the previous government. He said, “It can be difficult, Mr. Poilavere, you spent years in running against Justin Trudeau and Carbon Tax and they both left.” “I am a very different person than Justin Trudeau.”
Carney’s leadership and combative attitude against Trump appear to be echoing with voters. In January, a Nanos Poll led 27 percent marks to the liberals in a Nanos pole.
The latest poll released on Thursday features The Liberals ahead of five points, which is a dramatic reverse in just three months. The January survey had a margin of 3.1 points error; The latest pole margin is 2.7.
Trump’s trade measures and inflammatory comments, which is a threat to convert Canada into a “51st state”, has shaken a wave of Canadian nationalism that has promoted liberal support in the election.