Mark Carney is in Washington, D.C. to meet with Donald Trump amid the American president’s ongoing threats to Canada’s sovereignty and economy. Follow the Star’s live coverage Tuesday.
Updated 5 hrs ago
Insider says Mark Carney knows ‘anything can happen’ in meeting with Donald Trump

Prime Minister Mark Carney boards a government plane on Monday, May 5, 2025.
Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press
WASHINGTON — A plan beats no plan, as Mark Carney likes to say. But in Donald Trump’s White House, plans go out the window.
It’s going to be a perilous few hours for the newly elected prime minister as he navigates the first handshake, the postures, the unscripted remarks in front of a phalanx of cameras for a series high-stakes meetings in Washington. When his plane landed here Monday, there was a red carpet and a standard greeting by an acting U.S. protocol official and Canada’s ambassador in Washington. Nothing fancy. Nothing that attested to a special relationship.
As Carney was flying to Joint Base Andrews outside the capital, Trump was already airily dissing their Tuesday tête-à-tête. “I’m not sure what he wants to see me about, but I guess he wants to make a deal,” he said. “Everybody does.”
Read the full dispatch from Ottawa Bureau Chief Tonda MacCharles
Updated 5 hrs ago
Opinion: Carney’s new skills as a politician will get a workout from Donald Trump
Mark Carney is new to politics, but in a matter of months, he is learning that each fight gets tougher.
He handily won the Liberal leadership in March. His election victory a week ago was tighter. This week, he’s up against Donald Trump, and the newly elected prime minister has to be aware that the stakes in this contest are higher and more daunting than the first two.
And unlike those first two battles, a win won’t come in a day. A swift reversal in all the tariffs would be a miracle, so the best outcome from Tuesday’s meetings in Washington, most Canada-U.S. watchers acknowledge, is to establish a working relationship with the mercurial Trump.
Read the full column here
Updated 5 hrs ago
Opinion: Here is what Carney must achieve on his historic mission to Washington
By Alan Kessel, Contributor

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney walks off after a press conference in Ottawa on May 2, 2025.
Patrick Doyle/AFP via Getty Images
When Prime Minister Mark Carney travels to Washington on Tuesday to meet President Donald Trump, it will be more than a diplomatic courtesy call. It will be a pivotal test of Canada’s ability to navigate the fault lines of a shifting world order — and to assert its sovereign leadership in North America.
Carney’s trip comes just weeks before Canada hosts the G7 Summit at Kananaskis — a once-in-seven-years opportunity to shape the agenda of the world’s leading democracies. Rarely has that convening carried higher stakes. With Trump’s return to the Oval Office, America’s relationship with its G7 partners is strained anew by protectionism, tariffs, and a transactional approach to alliances. Meanwhile, G6 members — Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan — are struggling to defend the principles of open markets and collective security that have underpinned prosperity for generations.
Read the full column from contributor Alan Kessel
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