Carney’s Davos speech was more than a polite rebuke; it was a declaration that Canada would no longer quietly accept a world where the strongest twist economic ties into weapons. By standing with Greenland and Denmark against Trump’s Arctic ambitions, and by openly rejecting nostalgia for the old “rules-based order,” Carney framed Canada as a middle power ready to confront uncomfortable truths rather than hide behind them. His move toward a trade deal with China on electric vehicles and agriculture signaled a bid for strategic autonomy, not submission.
Trump’s furious response laid bare the raw imbalance at the heart of the relationship. “Canada lives because of the United States,” he wrote, turning alliance into threat. The message was unmistakable: choose Washington’s line or pay an unbearable economic price. Between Carney’s demand for dignity and Trump’s promise of devastation, Canada now faces a defining test of how much sovereignty it is truly willing to risk.