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In an exclusive full video, Canadian PM Mark Carney reveals explosive details of his direct phone call with President Donald Trump. Carney opens up about the heated exchange, giving a fiery response to questions about their upcoming meeting and potential discussions on tariffs, trade, and economic policy. Watch as Carney unpacks the tense conversation, offering insights into the high-stakes political atmosphere before his pivotal meeting with the U.S. president.

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00:00Canadians made their voices heard with a voter turnout rate that hasn't been seen in early voting than ever before.
00:22The engagement of Canadians at rallies on social media and around the dinner table was very high.
00:28And while different visions were put forth by various contenders, we disagreed agreeably,
00:34and the leader of every party quickly and graciously accepted the results.
00:39At a time when democracies around the world are under threat, Canadians can be proud that ours remains strong.
00:47As I've been clear since day one of my leadership campaign in January, I'm in politics to do big things, not to be something.
00:55And now that Canadians have honoured me with a mandate to bring about big changes quickly, I will work relentlessly to fulfil that trust.
01:04As I stressed on election night, I am committed to working with others, governing as a team in Cabinet and caucus, and working constructively across parties in Parliament.
01:16Working in real partnership with provinces, territories, and Indigenous peoples.
01:22And bringing together labour, business, and civil society to advance the nation-building investments that will transform our economy.
01:31In the coming weeks, I will unveil more of our plans to engage with Canadians as we embark on the biggest transformation of our economy since the end of the Second World War.
01:41This will be an incredibly exciting time as we take control of our economic destiny to create a new Canadian economy that works for everyone.
01:54We will begin to set out that new path for Canada, with a new Cabinet to be sworn in on the week of the 12th of May, and the recall of Parliament on May 26th.
02:06We will have the privilege of welcoming His Majesty King Charles III, who will deliver Canada's speech from the throne on May 27th.
02:15Her Majesty the Queen will join this visit.
02:20This is an historic honour which matches the weight of our times.
02:27I know that many Canadians share my enthusiasm about this.
02:35To the immediate priorities of my government, beginning with our relationship with the United States.
02:41As I've stressed repeatedly, our old relationship, based on steadily increasing integration, is over.
02:51The questions now are how our nations will cooperate in the future, and where we in Canada will move on.
03:00Shortly after the start of the election campaign, I met with President Trump, or I spoke to him.
03:10On Tuesday, I had a very constructive call with President Trump, and we agreed to meet next Tuesday in Washington.
03:29Our focus will be on both immediate trade pressures and the broader future economic and security relationship between our two sovereign countries.
03:41My government will fight to get the best deal for Canada.
03:44We will take all the time necessary, but not more, in order to do so.
03:50In parallel, we will strengthen our relationships with reliable trading partners and allies.
03:55Canada has what the world needs, and we uphold the values the world respects.
04:02Au cours des derniers jours, je me suis entretenu avec le Président Macron, le Président du Conseil européen d'Acosta,
04:11le Premier ministre du Japon, Ichiba, et le Secrétaire général des Nations Unies, Guterres.
04:18J'ai aussi parlé au Président Zelensky auprès de qui j'ai raffirmé l'engagement du Canada envers le peuple ukrainien.
04:27Dans les semaines et les mois à venir, je saisirai toutes les occasions d'échanger avec nos alliés et partenaires.
04:37Pour bâtir des relations renforcées fondées sur des valeurs communes, nous allons faire preuve de leadership à l'international.
04:47Nous aurons d'ailleurs l'occasion d'en faire la démonstration en juin, alors que le Canada précidera le sommet de G7.
04:58Nous allons réinforcer notre strength ici, à la maison, en construire une économie qui crée des jobs,
05:04qui augmente des revenus, et qui apporte des chocs.
05:08Pour y arriver, nous allons bâtir une seule économie canadienne au lieu de 13.
05:15D'ici la fête du Canada, mon gouvernement aura contribué à l'attente de cet objectif.
05:23Nous allons réinforcer les barrières fédérales à l'international de l'international à l'international
05:28par 1 janvier, pour aider à l'unir le plus potentiel de Canada.
05:32Nous allons travailler avec les provinces, les territoires et les groupes d'indigérance
05:35pour identifier des projets qui sont dans l'intérêt national,
05:39des projets qui vont connecter Canada,
05:41d'éliminer nos ties avec le monde,
05:43et développer notre économie pour des générations.
05:46Nous allons faire le gouvernement du Canada un catalyst pour ces projets,
05:49pas un impediment.
05:52Nous allons toujours être guidés par notre conviction
05:54que notre économie est only strong quand elle s'assurée à l'international.
05:58Cela signifie...
05:59...bring down costs pour les Canadiens et les aider à l'international.
06:03Nous allons mettre plus de l'argent dans les pockets de Canadiens,
06:06avec une taxe middle-class taxe qui va prendre effecte par Canada Day,
06:10saving 2-income families up to $825 a year.
06:14Nous allons protéger les programmes qui sauver les familles $1,000 a year,
06:18including pharmacare et $10 a day daycare.
06:22Nous allons expandir le Canada Dental Care Plan
06:25à 8 millions de Canadiens,
06:27saving les familles d'environ $800 per visit.
06:31To lower costs for first-time homebuyers,
06:34we will cut GST on new homes at or under $1 million,
06:38allowing them to save up to $50,000,
06:41and we will lower the GST on homes between $1 million and $1.5 million.
06:48These tax measures will provide immediate relief,
06:51but they won't be sufficient to make housing affordable again.
06:56For that, we have to build.
06:59We will address failures in the housing market head-on,
07:02unleashing the power of public-private cooperation
07:05at a scale not seen in generations.
07:08We will slash development charges in half for all multi-unit housing.
07:13That's about $40,000 off the cost of a two-bedroom apartment in Toronto.
07:17And we will create an entirely new Canadian housing industry
07:21in modular and prefabricated housing using Canadian technology,
07:26Canadian skilled workers, and Canadian lumber.
07:30We will build houses faster, at lower costs,
07:33with a smaller environmental footprint in construction
07:36and greater efficiency once families move in.
07:40And to kick-start these efforts,
07:42we will create a new entity, Build Canada Homes,
07:45and provide $25 billion in financing to private developers.
07:52We will build two times more homes per year,
07:56and create a new construction industry with Canadian technologies,
08:02with Canadian workers qualified Canadians, and Canadian wood.
08:07My government will focus on keeping Canada secure as a sovereign nation,
08:13and Canadians safe in their communities.
08:16We will build a stronger Canadian Armed Forces to protect Canadians,
08:19defend our sovereignty, and support our allies.
08:22We will strengthen our border security with 1,000 more CBSA officers,
08:27as well as scores of dog teams, drones, and scanners to fight the traffic of guns and drugs.
08:32We will strengthen Canadian law enforcement by hiring 1,000 more RCMP officers,
08:38and giving law enforcement more tools to fight crime.
08:41We will toughen the criminal code and bail laws for those threatening the safety of Canadians,
08:46including making bail harder to get for those charged with stealing cars,
08:50with home invasion, human trafficking, and smuggling.
08:53We will strengthen our immigration to sustainable levels by capping the total number of temporary workers and international students at less than 5% of Canada's population by the end of 2027.
09:17That's a sharp drop from the recent high of 7.3%,
09:21and this will help ease strains on housing, on public infrastructure, and social services.
09:26At the same time, we will work to attract the best talent in the world to build our economy.
09:35Canada has what everyone wants.
09:38We are a confident nation that celebrates our diversity, that believes in and practices free speech,
09:44that respects the rule of law, that has a vibrant democracy.
09:49We value innovators and builders. We trust science. We protect our immense natural heritage.
09:57For Canadians abroad, thinking about returning to build their lives in our nation, there's never been a better time to come home.
10:06In all our actions, we will be guided by a new fiscal discipline.
10:14Our government will spend less money so that Canadians can invest more.
10:21Day-to-day government spending, the government's operating budget, has been growing by an unsustainable 9% every year.
10:30We will bring that down to 2%, less than half the average nominal growth rate of the economy.
10:36We will not cut any transfers to provinces, territories, or individuals.
10:41Instead, we will balance our operating budget over the next three years by cutting waste, capping the public service,
10:46ending duplicative programs, and deploying technology to boost public sector productivity.
10:53We will use scarce taxpayer dollars to catalyze massive private investment.
10:59By working together, we can give ourselves far more than the Americans can ever take away.
11:07By working together, we can build Canada strong.
11:12To strengthen the challenges we face, Canada must be united.
11:19Guided by this approach, I've interacted with the leaders of the opposition.
11:26I've made part of my intention to work with them to make our government more efficient,
11:33support our workers and businesses, and put our economy on the right way.
11:41I've also exchanged with the Prime Minister of the Province and the Territory,
11:45who are essential partners of the federal government.
11:49With them, I expect to continue the long-term work
11:56during the meeting of the Prime Minister that we had before the election,
12:00where we have been extended to break the barriers that prevent the internal commerce
12:06and the mobility of the movement.
12:12Canadians in the NHL play for a variety of teams passionately against each other.
12:19But when they're in a once-in-a-lifetime series such as the Four Nations or the Olympics,
12:24those same Canadians come together to win it all.
12:28During elections, Canadians play and cheer for different teams.
12:33Now that election is over, and we are in a once-in-a-lifetime crisis.
12:38It's time together, it's time to come together, to put on our Team Canada sweaters and win big.
12:45It's time to be united.
12:48Unis, Canada has accomplished difficult things, impossible things.
12:55Now is the time for ambition, to be bold, to meet this crisis with an overwhelming positive force
13:02that is a united Canada.
13:05It's time to build, and my government is getting to work to build.
13:10Build big, bold, and build now.
13:14Thank you very much, and I look forward to your questions.
13:17Thank you very much.
13:18We will go to the room for questions.
13:20One question, one follow.
13:21Because there is a long list, let's try and keep the questions as short as possible.
13:25We'll start with Ashley Burke from CBC.
13:28Good morning, Prime Minister.
13:30What specifically do you want to get out of your first in-person meeting with President Trump,
13:34and will you be focused on trying to get the tariffs lifted?
13:38Thank you for the question.
13:39For the first meeting, as I mentioned in my remarks, and the President and I discussed
13:45when we had our constructive call, there are two sets of issues.
13:49There are the immediate tariffs, both sectoral and so-called reciprocal and fentanyl tariffs,
13:55and then there is the broader relationship.
13:58So addressing both sets of issues, we'll see how that progress goes.
14:03It's important to get engaged immediately, which has always been my intention, has always been his intention,
14:09and I'm pleased to have the opportunity for quite a comprehensive set of meetings that will take place on Tuesday.
14:15How do you avoid an Oval Office ambush like we saw happen to President Zelenskyy?
14:21Look, I go there with the expectation of constructive, difficult but constructive discussions.
14:29That's the spirit of the conversations that the President and I had.
14:34You know, you go to these meetings well prepared, understanding the objectives of your counterpart,
14:41and always acting in the best interest of Canada, and we'll go from there. Thank you.
14:47Mélanie Marquis, La Presse.
14:49Bonjour, M. Carney.
14:50Bonjour, M. Carney.
14:51Félicitations.
14:52Vous réclamez… vous avez réclamé un mandat fort pendant toute la campagne.
14:56Vous avez une minorité aujourd'hui.
14:58Qu'est-ce que ça change pour vous dans la façon de gouverner, puis qu'est-ce que ça change aussi au rapport de force avec l'administration Trump?
15:06Alors, premièrement, merci pour votre question et vos félicitations.
15:11Et je crois que nous avons un mandat fort parce que pendant la campagne électorale, j'étais très clair.
15:21Nos objectifs, c'est de faire face par rapport aux Américains et d'avoir une stratégie économique avec de l'audace.
15:35Des grands projets, une économie par 13, des nouveaux partenariats à l'échelle internationale.
15:44Et nous avons reçu plus de 8,5 millions de votes. C'est le plus haut niveau dans l'histoire du Canada.
15:54Nous avons des députés dans toutes les provinces. Nous sommes dans une majorité en 7 provinces sur 10.
16:04Nous avons le niveau des députés le plus haut au Québec, par exemple, depuis 1980, je crois, et le niveau le plus grand dans l'histoire de la Colombie-Britannique, par exemple.
16:22Alors, une campagne très transparente, une plateforme claire et un mandat fort.
16:29Mais cela dit, il faut travailler avec le Parlement et surtout avec le Québec et avec les provinces et les territoires afin de mettre en œuvre ces objectifs, cette plateforme.
16:44Mais, par rapport à ça, est-ce que ça change votre rapport de force par rapport à l'administration Trump?
16:52Je ne crois pas. Je ne crois pas.
16:54Je vais peut-être poser en même temps ma question de suivi. Vous avez une minorité. Est-ce que vous seriez intéressé à accueillir au sein du caucus libéral des députés d'autres partis?
17:05Est-ce qu'il y a des tentatives qui ont déjà été faites en coulisses pour les convaincre de traverser la Ligue?
17:10Je crois que, comme j'ai dit, mon mandat est fort. C'est fort. Nos objectifs sont clairs.
17:20Et, par exemple, j'ai eu des conversations avec… une conversation très constructive avec M. Blanchet en ce qui concerne la stratégie pour le Canada et une conversation constructive avec M. Poilievre en ce qui concerne notre stratégie par rapport aux Américains.
17:38Il n'y a qu'un premier ministre. Et nous avons des objectifs assez similaires. Alors, c'est un mandat fort pour moi. Et en ce qui concerne les négociations avec les Américains, c'est clair pour M. Trump, qui est le premier ministre du Canada.
18:04Alain Bezzetti.
18:06Oui, bonjour, M. Carney. Bonjour.
18:09Bonjour.
18:10Vous le savez bien, M. Poilievre n'a pas gagné son siège. Il va donc essayer de revenir au Parlement en demandant à quelqu'un de lui céder le sien. Vous aurez, vous, à déclencher une élection partielle. J'aimerais savoir quelle sera votre réflexion pour choisir la date de cette partielle. Est-ce que ce sera le plus tôt possible ou on le laisse attendre jusqu'en novembre?
18:28J'ai déjà indiqué à M. Poilievre que je vais déclencher une élection partielle si c'est la décision du Parti conservateur aussitôt que possible. Simple.
18:42J'ai déjà indiqué à M. Poilievre que si c'est la décision de lui et le Parti conservateur à déclencher, si je peux le dire, une élection partielle, je m'assurerai que ce soit le plus tôt possible.
18:57OK. Et donc, je n'aurai pas de supplémentaire là-dessus, mais vous avez dit aussi que vous allez demander au roi de venir lire le discours du trône.
19:10Comme vous le savez, vous avez gagné beaucoup de sièges au Québec parce qu'il y a bien des nationalistes qui ont accepté de vous prêter leur vote, un vote qu'ils auraient peut-être donné au Bloc québécois autrement.
19:20Des nationalistes qui ne sont pas nécessairement en amour avec la royauté britannique. Comment croyez-vous que ça va être reçu et comment leur expliquez-vous ça?
19:27C'est simple. Premièrement, j'ai demandé au roi et sa majesté, il l'a accepté. Il va assister à l'ouverture du parlement. Ça, c'est clair.
19:49Et c'est une… ça, cette situation, cette décision souligne la souveraineté du Canada. C'est absolument clair. C'est un message très clair par rapport aux autres pays à travers le monde. Et c'est un honneur.
20:11Merci. To be clear, I made the request of his majesty and he is accepted. He will open parliament with the speech from the throne.
20:24And that is a clear… it clearly underscores the sovereignty of our country.
20:31In what way, though? In quelle façon ça souligne la souveraineté de demander au monarche de notre pays?
20:37C'est la troisième question?
20:39Yeah, but my question was cut… like, cut up.
20:43Okay, yeah. In what way, it's… it underscores the… this is the ultimate head of state, which underscores the…
20:55You know, one of the points I made… I'll answer it this way.
20:58When I became Prime Minister for the first time, I mentioned that there were the people fonders of Canada, the people autochtones, the people français, and the people anglais.
21:18And so, it's… it's… it's the foundation of our nation, the nation canadiennes.
21:28Deco.
21:30Kenzie Gray, Global.
21:32Hi, Mr. Carney. In your second call with the President, did Mr. Trump outright say or insinuate at any point that Canada should become the 51st state?
21:40He did not.
21:41All right. We've heard Mr. Trump on April 23rd and his surrogates throughout the final days of the campaign reiterate the idea that they believe Canada should become the 51st state.
21:51On the campaign trail, you said on multiple occasions that respect for Canada would be one of the key things in terms of having a meeting with him.
21:57Do you think, over the past few days, we have seen respect for Canada from the Trump administration?
22:02Look, the… I would… I… it's always important to distinguish want from reality.
22:09La volonté et la réalité, right?
22:12What someone wants and what is reality and what the… what the Canadian people clearly have stated, virtually without exception, is this will never, ever happen.
22:22And if any of the leaders of the party and their representatives would attest to that, I think the votes attest to it.
22:30I think the public dialogue attests to it as well.
22:33And we are, you know, we're meeting as heads of our government to discuss that partnership.
22:39Now, I'm not pretending those discussions will be easy or they won't proceed in a straight line.
22:45There will be zigs and zags, ups and downs.
22:47But as I said in my remarks, I will… I will fight for the best deal for Canada and only accept the best deal for Canada and take as much time as it's necessary.
22:57Davis Legree, iPolitics.
23:00Hi. Thanks for taking our questions.
23:01Just one for me to try and squeeze some more reporters in.
23:04But to my colleague's point, the White House's public position has continued to be that Canada should be the 51st state.
23:09You yourself have said that Donald Trump is trying to break Canada.
23:12And considering all that, how can you expect good-faith negotiations when you travel to Washington next week?
23:17Look, I think the…
23:19First, I've had the direct conversation with him on whatever day it was, Tuesday, I guess it was, a couple of days ago.
23:27And we agreed to have those negotiations.
23:30Very clear discussion between us, as I said, very constructive.
23:33And I would say the time allocated to our meeting and the seniority of the…
23:38I mean, he's the president, so that's as senior as you get.
23:41But the other members of his administration who will be assisting at those meetings suggest the seriousness of the discussions.
23:49Again, we are not… do not expect white smoke out of that meeting.
23:54There will be white smoke probably later somewhere else in the world this month.
23:58But do not expect that.
23:59But… so that's the first thing, is just the level of, you know, the direct dialogue, the discussion, the level of people there.
24:08The second point, I'll make it quickly, and thank you for restricting the question so others can get in,
24:13is that he respects, as others who are good negotiators, and he's one of the best negotiators, they respect strength.
24:23That's why we're building Canada strong.
24:25There's lots of reasons to build Canada strong, but the point is, and I will make this point repeatedly,
24:30we have more than enough to do here at home.
24:33That point about we can give ourselves more than the Americans can take away is absolutely right.
24:38We can have a bigger boost to our economy, to incomes, to jobs, by focusing on building one Canadian economy,
24:46by building these nation-building projects, by focusing on getting productivity up,
24:50by reducing government waste, by driving investment in this country.
24:53And so that is a good in and of itself, we're going to focus on that while we have these negotiations with the Americans.
25:01And if the negotiations with the Americans take longer, so be it.
25:06We've got more than enough to do here.
25:09Kyle Duggan, the Canadian Press.
25:11Mr. Carney, will you be pursuing a formal governing pact of any kind with the NDP?
25:16No.
25:17Short answer, no.
25:19And why not?
25:20Why?
25:23That's my response.
25:24We campaigned on a very clear set of objectives, very clear policies to back those up.
25:33And we received the highest number of votes in Canadian history.
25:37Yes, it is not quite a majority, but highest number of votes.
25:40As I said moments ago, majorities in seven of the ten provinces, seats in all the provinces, highest vote totals and deputy counts in a number of those provinces.
25:50And it's also a style of governing as well, which is in order to do what we need to do as a country, as a country, we will need to work in partnership with all the provinces, with indigenous peoples.
26:04Yes, obviously, by definition in Parliament, we will need to get majority support to pass legislation.
26:12But this is legislation that Canadians, or at least we will be putting forth legislation that's consistent with our platform and consistent with the requirements of the time.
26:22And I will remind that it's not just words.
26:27We are in a crisis.
26:28If you look at the terrible manifestation of that today in Oshawa for the GM workers, 2,000 GM workers, and I'll just express my deepest sympathy for them and their families.
26:47A very difficult time.
26:48We are committed to supporting workers, all the dollars from our tariffs going to support workers, fighting hard for our auto sector, all our sectors, in these negotiations with the Americans, and making sure that companies act in true partnership as well in maintaining employment and investment in Canada.
27:11And if not, there will be consequences for those companies.
27:14Louis Bluyn, Radio Canada.
27:16Bonjour, Monsieur Carney.
28:17I'm not sure I need to add the other words that were around it.
28:21But, look, it is complex.
28:23Particularly, there are examples where, certainly from our perspective, the fentanyl tariffs, well, were not merited to begin with, but are even less merited, given all the steps that the Government of Canada has taken and the progress that's been made.
28:37But, you know, this will be a broader discussion, and it's one of the cards that they have, and therefore, we'll see how it plays out.
28:47D'après you, what do you think, what do you think, what do you think, what Donald Trump wants in this negotiation?
28:51It's one of the questions, because it's one of the questions, because there are a few objectives.
29:03It's one of the things that we think, what do you think, what do you think, what do you think?
30:34We'll have time for one more very fast question.
30:37Catherine Lavec from the National Post.
30:38Okay, I'll try to make it too very fast.
30:41That's the spirit.
30:42That's the spirit, Catherine.
30:44That'll get me coming back.
30:45Your party picked up seats across the country, but lost a few seats in Ontario.
30:49Why do you think that is, and did those seats cost you your majority?
30:54Well, I think arithmetically, yes, but you could pick, we could pick other, you know, other seats that went various ways.
31:02You know, we'll reflect on that.
31:04I think what I, as I said at the top, what I take, as the Canadians voted for many reasons, in different circumstances.
31:13First and foremost, what we've been talking about most of this time, standing up to the Americans, getting the best deal for Canada.
31:20That's their, relatedly, a strong economy, economy that works for everyone.
31:24But also, clearly, affordability issues.
31:27We had a big focus on affordability, security, and safety.
31:31That's what we take, that's what we take as, maybe I should say personally,
31:36a take as the mandate that the focus of this government should be on those issues.
31:42You know, as you know, to govern is to choose.
31:44You have to decide where you're going to focus.
31:45And I'm signaling, and of course, there will be a speech from the throne and subsequent communications,
31:51but I'm signaling clearly where that focus is.
31:54And can we expect your cabinet to be larger than your previous one?
31:58And will François-Philippe Champagne remain as finance minister?
32:00Did he ask you to ask that question?
32:02Now we know, now we know your sources.
32:07Yeah.
32:10We will, look, I committed to an efficient cabinet, a focus cabinet, cabinet with parity, gender parity,
32:20and we'll work towards it.
32:23Those final decisions haven't been made.
32:25So, Monsieur Champagne, he will have to wait.
32:30Sorry about that.
32:32Thank you very, thank you very much.
32:34Thank you very much.
32:34Thank you very.
32:36I think we have to respect the president of the, we, we have to respect the, yeah.
32:43I am truly sorry, but the prime minister does have to go.
32:48Yeah, bien sûr.
32:49Of course.
32:49Yeah.
32:50Remember that.
32:52That's fine.
32:53That's fine.
32:53Yeah.
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