Trump to meet with Canada’s Mark Carney for high-stakes trade talks

(NewsNation) — The trade clash between the United States and Canada will likely take center stage as newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney meets with President Donald Trump at the White House on Tuesday.

The two leaders are scheduled to greet each other at 11:30 a.m. ET, marking their first face-to-face meeting.

Ahead of Tuesday’s meeting, Carney said on social media, “Canada and the United States are strongest when we work together — and that work starts now.”

The call for teamwork was underscored by tension from Trump’s repeated calls to make Canada the 51st state and his unrelenting tariff threats.

It was also a shift from Carney’s comments a week earlier, when he said the previous relationship between the countries was “over.”

“The questions now are how our nations will cooperate in the future,” Carney said.

A recent YouGov poll found that more than 60% of Canadians consider the U.S. an enemy or unfriendly.

Canada has long served as a top trading partner for the U.S.

Last year, Canada was the top destination for American exports, resulting in more than $750 billion in trade for the U.S.

Tuesday’s meeting will likely focus on that trade relationship, specifically the 25% tariffs currently levied against most goods from Canada.

“He’s coming to see me. I’m not sure what he wants to see me about, but I guess he wants to make a deal. Everybody does,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday.

The White House visit comes amid an expected update from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on where international trade deals stand.

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Trump’s blunders ‘raise the risk of global conflict’ as enemies ‘gang up’: analyst



After a series of diplomatic blunders, President Donald Trump and America's reputation loss could "raise the risk of global conflict" and come at a major cost, including "mischief or worse" from enemies.

In an opinion piece published Monday, Bloomberg columnist Andreas Kluth describes how a good reputation can be difficult to obtain or maintain, and Trump "has squandered whatever credibility America had left in foreign and security policy."

Following his rambling speech last week in front of the United Nations and his struggle to see the difference between "personal chemistry" with President Vladimir Putin and diplomatic action, Trump has effectively put both adversaries and allies on edge, wrote Kluth.

"Inklings of danger are everywhere," Kluth writes. "America’s partners are becoming more anxious and making alternative arrangements for their security: Saudi Arabia just signed a defensive pact with Pakistan after watching an Israeli strike against its Gulf neighbor Qatar, which is allied to, but got no help from, the United States. America’s adversaries keep testing the resolve of Trump and the West, as Putin is doing in eastern Europe. Or, like Xi Jinping in Beijing and Kim in Pyongyang, they’re recalculating bellicose scenarios in secret. Other countries, like India, are wary of committing to America and keeping all options open, even clutching hands with Moscow and Beijing."

And although Trump is not the first president to struggle with navigating U.S. reputation among foreign nations, it puts America at an unfortunate future disadvantage.

"Against this backdrop, anybody watching US policy for the past decade, from friendly Europe to adversarial China, already had reason to doubt US credibility. What Trump has done in his second term is to remove the doubts and confirm the loss. Allies now know they can’t trust America, while adversaries are ganging up and recalculating their plans for mischief or worse.

It's unclear what will happen in the future; a damaged reputation jeopardizes diplomacy.

"These responses to America’s loss of credibility will raise the risk of global conflict," Kluth writes. "The danger will go up even more if the US, under this or a future president, panics and decides to overcompensate in reestablishing its reputation, with a demonstratively hawkish turn that could tip into war. If America and the whole world are becoming less safe, it’s because Donald Trump’s foreign policy is, literally, in-credible."