The new Prime Minister of Canada, Mark Carney, has expanded the anti -us rhetoric since he went to replace Justin Trudeau at the head of the Liberal Party, saying that this week the great white north does not need the United States.
Carney said that she is looking to diversify commercial associations with raised ideas countries and that Canada will win “much more than Donald Trump can take away”, a change in Trudeau’s tone, who tried to go back. “
“We must react with overwhelming force,” said Carney during a debate from leaders in Montreal on Wednesday, repeatedly calling the commercial war “the most important crisis of our lives.”

The former central banker said that Canada’s relationship with the United States as we know it has ended.
“The relationship we have had with the United States in the last four decades has changed fundamental.”
Trump seems to have dropped the mockery of the ‘governor’ with which he was Trudeau and has referred to Carney for his real title, although this week, the press secretary of the White House, Karoline Leavitt, rejected Trump’s claims.
Carney, who rejected Washington and chose Europe as his first international trip as prime minister last month, with French president Macron and the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Starmer, and during the debate said he is looking for commercial agreements with the EU to replace the United States, where 50% of Canadian imports.

“Canada has to create new options,” he said, added that he is looking for more “reliable” business partners.
Carney also revealed that he is boycotting the legs of the leg, like many Canadians, including American wines and spirits.
The leaders of the Canadian party faced a debate this week before a complementary federal election for April 28. Surveys currently show the leading conservative leader of Carney, Pierre Poilievre, in approximately six percentage points.