
PARIS—On Mark Carney‘s first foray abroad, he found in France un ami. Yes. Ally. Yes. But advocate? Non.
As the two stood side by side before a working lunch and delivered statements, French President Emmanuel Macron uttered the word sovereignty once.
But it was not to directly endorse Canada’s growing resistance to Donald Trump or his designs on making Canada a 51st state, more to embrace the concept as a shared value.
Macron warmly welcomed Carney Monday at the Elysee Palace as “Mr. Prime Minister, dear Mark”.
He showered him with expressions of France’s solidarity with Canada on international trade and security challenges, but steered wide of any reference to the U.S. or Trump.
“In the current international context, we also want to be able to develop our strategic projects with our closest and most loyal partners, because we are convinced we are stronger together, and best able to ensure the respect of out interests, and the full exercise of our sovereignty,” Macron said.
It was as close he would come to acknowledging the current threat that Carney and Canada are forced to confront.
Carney nevertheless echoed the belief Canada needs to strengthen ties with its friends right now.
Neither took media questions after their statements, though Canadian reporters tried to ask. Neither mentioned Trump.
Macron’s press secretary told Canadian reporters that France is just not obsessed with the sovereignty question dogging Canadians.
Carney hailed the two countries’ long history and friendship, saying “We both stand for sovereignty and security, demonstrated through our unwavering support of Ukraine.”
“We must reinforce the cooperation between our countries to ensure our security, that of our allies, and that of the whole world,” said Carney.
Carney said Macron is “a man of action” for the restoration of Notre Dame Cathedral — which was where the prime minister kicked off a whirlwind visit to Europe and the U.K.
A handful of Canadians waved and walked up to say hello to him there.
Carney is a churchgoing Catholic, but this visit with his wife, Diana, was as much a personal as a political stop before he met with French President Emmanuel Macron.
Carney and his wife walked around the perimeter of a magnificent post-fire restoration that he considers an impressive symbol of resilience. He later acknowledged it as a source of renewed national pride, completed under Macron.
The newly named prime minister is on a trek to find who Canada’s allies are as he navigates the fraught and noisy relationship with Trump.
But Carney set his sights high and expectations low, meeting Macron in Paris, and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer in London.
Both are fellow NATO and G7 partners who’ve met with Trump in the past two weeks.
Carney will also sit down with King Charles at Buckingham Palace.
His trip follows conversations with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and an intense weekend of briefings.
“Strong, reliable partners,” Carney posted on X, are now more important than ever.
Carney asserted on X that “Canada is Ukraine’s steadfast ally. We will make sure Ukraine has the military support it needs to defend itself,” — setting an early contrast with Trump’s push on Ukraine to cut a deal with Russia.
Zelenskyy offered more details, saying Carney agreed with the need to take a harder line on Russia, by stepping up pressure against Russia’s banking sector, and that “Canada is interested in military-industrial and defense cooperation” with Ukraine.
Ukraine needs friends. So does Canada.
Jody Thomas, a former federal national security and intelligence adviser under Justin Trudeau, said in an interview it is a fragile time for multilateralism, and Carney’s trip is going “to try and establish Canada as a credible player in what is left and continues to exist to the multilateral world.”
“I’m not sure we’ll get the statements of allyship publicly,” said Thomas. “We’ll certainly get photo ops, and we’ll get confirmation that countries want to work with Canada, and I think they’ll do that absent reference to the U.S., frankly.”
A senior government official, providing a background briefing to reporters on the plane, said “the trip will speak for itself in showing that Canada has very solid friends and allies,” whether or not there are any declarations backing Canada against Trump’s merger threats.
Carney said Friday Canada doesn’t need others to stand up for its sovereignty.
Still the official said the message of friendship “subtle or otherwise” is important. Canada is, he said, “a very good friend of the United States, but we all know what is going on there, and it is evident that we can do more with other countries, not just the United States.”
Doug Ford’s meeting with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in Washington on Thursday provided a roadmap on how to proceed regarding tariffs,
Doug Ford’s meeting with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in Washington on Thursday provided a roadmap on how to proceed regarding tariffs,
Carney may not reach agreement for how to mount an international response to Trump’s tariffs nevertheless.
“I think it’s fair to say that all countries that are subject to the tariffs that have been put on by the United States are calibrating their responses, talking to each other, seeing what is in their own country’s national interests, and in some cases that may or may not lead to co-ordinated responses,” the official said.
Legault stressed that Carney must protect Quebec’s supply-managed agriculture sector, and reduce temporary immigration to Canada.
Then Carney was to wing his way across the Atlantic, before planning to return via the Arctic with a stop in Iqaluit.
In a statement, the Prime Minister’s Office said the goal of the trip is “to strengthen two of our closest and longest-standing economic and security partnerships, and to reaffirm Canada’s Arctic security and sovereignty.”
If the U.S. noticed, it wasn’t clear.
On Sunday morning American political TV shows, Trump and his officials continued to justify his tariff plan, with the first levies — 25 per cent steel and aluminum tariffs taking effect last week — and more global tariff pain to come on April 2.
Upon taking office on Friday, Carney said he will seek to put the U.S. relationship on a more businesslike footing. Ambassador Kirsten Hillman, a Trudeau appointee who for now remains Canada’s envoy in Washington, said on Sunday she hoped everyone would follow suit.
“Canadians need to recognize that the way in which this administration communicates in public is quite animated. That’s a diplomatic word for it,” she told CBC interviewer Rosemary Barton.
“And we should not react to every interview Trump gives,” Hillman said, adding that “we are having to move from here to a place where we can solve these problems with the Americans … and set a tone that works, and that goes both ways.”
“And I do think that’s an important posture: strong, businesslike, clear and really advocating for the practicalities of where we’re at.”
Thomas, a former deputy defence minister who sits on the independent Canada-U.S. advisory council named by Trudeau, said Carney’s trip will have another purpose, as Carney seeks to give allies “confidence that we will meet our commitments.”
“And he’s been very serious so far that we are going to meet our (NATO spending) security commitments. And so this is his chance to reassure and confirm.”
Carney pledged in his leadership campaign to reach the NATO defence spending target of two per cent of GDP by 2030, two years ahead of the Trudeau government’s target. Right now, Canada is a laggard, with NATO figures showing it spent 1.37 per cent of GDP, or roughly $41 billion, on defence in 2024.
Carney, Thomas said, is “well known to the leaders he’s going to meet in Europe”: He led the Bank of England during Britain’s exit from the European Union, and previously the Bank of Canada during the 2008-09 financial crisis, and is a past UN special envoy on climate action and finance.
Lawrence Herman, an international trade law expert and senior fellow at the C.D. Howe Institute, said Carney “is doing the right thing” in travelling to Europe and the U.K. as his first foreign trip.
“The worst would be to be seen as a kind of supplicant by meeting with Trump, whose continued insults of Canada are demeaning and totally unacceptable.”
Given Trump’s breach of and disdain for international agreements, including the WTO and NATO, Herman said, “it’s highly symbolic for Carney to meet first with European leaders that are experiencing the same concerns over American aggressiveness as Canada. There are many common interests here. It sends the right signal.”
Herman added that on a more concrete level, “ Canada and Europe (including the U.K.) should explore increased trade linkages and new defence arrangements among themselves as the Americans back away from their trans-Atlantic and North American obligations.”
He added Carney should “stress the importance” of getting the Canada-European Union free trade agreement “fully implemented, moving beyond its provisional application.” Negotiations for the agreement were settled in 2014, but 10 countries, including G7 allies France and Italy, haven’t yet ratified it. “Getting the agreement fully into operations is in both sides’ mutual long-term interest, given Trump’s shattering of trade relations.”
Carney, an advocate of using artificial intelligence in innovation and in government services, has also put AI on the agenda with Macron and Starmer.
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