New PM Mark Carney admits he is an ‘elitist’ and ‘globalist’ but claims this is what Canada needs
World Economic Forum-linked Liberal leader and new Prime Minister of Canada, Mark Carney, admitted proudly that he a “globalist” and an “elitist”.
In an interview with British journalist Alastair Campbell, who is also a former Labour Party strategist, Carney bragged that he knows “how the world works” and “how to get things done” for Canada, and that being a globalist is what is needed for the country.
“I’m connected and I can deliver for the country,” he said. “People will charge me with being elitist or a globalist, to use that term, which is, well, that’s exactly what we need.”
🚨 @MarkJCarney openly brags about being an 'elitist' and 'globalist'—and says that’s exactly what Canada needs🚨 pic.twitter.com/MJZyauf0KS
— LifeSiteNews (@LifeSite) February 18, 2025
Carney was asked by Campbell, “When you’re sitting down with your key people, and you’re being absolutely honest with yourself and each other, what do you define as your core strength and your core weakness?”
“My weakness as a politician is I’ve not been a politician,” said Carney, who has never been elected to office but has served as a central banker in both Canada and England.
According to a recent article published by investigative journalist Sam Cooper on his The Bureau Substack titled The Carney-Trudeau Nexus: How Financial Elites from Davos to Beijing Are Shaping Canada’s Next Federal Election, Carney, similar to Trudeau, is involved in “a constellation of global influencers deeply tied” to both the WEF and Communist China’s Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).
“At its core, this network of remarkable figures—whose stated goals center on consolidating financial power across borders to coordinate carbon-reduction policies and progressive social outcomes—includes not just Carney and Trudeau but also former Canadian ambassador to China Dominic Barton, Trudeau campaign backers Mark Wiseman and Gerald Butts, and AIIB’s Jin Liqun, reportedly a senior Chinese Communist Party operative,” Cooper relayed in his report.
“For Canadians, understanding the intricate plutocratic web surrounding Trudeau and Carney is not an academic exercise—it offers a glimpse into the forces lining up to shape the nation’s climate, trade, and social policies,” the journalist asserted.
Cooper observed that the WEF “has become a lightning rod for both criticism and political polarization,” with opponents accusing it of “fostering undemocratic policymaking, while defenders dismiss such concerns as conspiracy theories.”
He noted that “an objective, network-based analysis of its ties to Beijing’s financial arms and the key figures in Carney’s orbit suggests a well-defined pattern of shared interests.”
In the report, Cooper stated that it is an “undebatable fact” that Justin Trudeau and his replacement Mark Carney are part of a tangled web with the WEF and Communist China.
He noted that both Trudeau and Carney are “so thoroughly woven together through global forums like the WEF that they are indistinguishable.”
“And while Carney seeks to distance himself from Trudeau’s unpopular record, his closest allies remain the same WEF-linked figures who helped shape Trudeau’s policies,” he added.
Carney’s connections with China are decades old. While serving at the Bank of England, Carney struck a deal with the People’s Bank of China that allowed all banks in England to approve of the Chinese Renminbi currency.
“Helping the internationalization of the Renminbi is a global good, consistent with London’s historic role,” noted Carney in a speech he gave about the move at the time.
Carney, whose ties to globalist groups have had Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre call him the World Economic Forum’s “golden boy,” has a history of promoting anti-life and anti-family agendas, including abortion and LGBT-related efforts. He has also previously endorsed the carbon tax and even criticized Trudeau when the tax was exempted from home heating oil in an effort to reduce costs for some Canadians.
Just recently, Carney criticized U.S. President Donald Trump for targeting woke ideology, and has vowed to promote “inclusiveness” in Canada.
As his first significant action as Prime Minister, Mark Carney declared that the decades-long era of deep economic and military cooperation between the U.S. and Canada is finished. The bold proclamation, delivered in Ottawa, came as a direct response to President Donald Trump’s newly announced tariffs on foreign-made automobiles—a move Carney framed as the final blow to a strained relationship.
“The old relationship we had with the United States, based on deepening integration of our economies and tight security and military cooperation, is over,” Carney told. The remarks, dripping with defiance, suggest Canada is preparing for a protracted trade battle rather than seeking compromise with its largest trading partner.
Carney’s combative stance raises serious concerns about his leadership. From the outset, he has adopted an adversarial tone toward Trump, mirroring—and arguably surpassing—the confrontational approach of his predecessor, Justin Trudeau. If this early posture is any indication, Carney may prove even more hostile to U.S. interests, a troubling prospect for a relationship already on shaky ground.
Carney’s rhetoric was more than a reaction to Trump’s tariffs—it was a calculated escalation. Rather than pursuing backchannel negotiations or measured diplomacy, the newly minted prime minister opted for public brinkmanship, vowing to “fundamentally reimagine” Canada’s economy to reduce reliance on the U.S.
“I reject any attempts to weaken Canada, to wear us down, to break us so that America can own us,” Carney declared, framing Trump’s trade policies as an existential threat. Such hyperbolic language is unlikely to de-escalate tensions, particularly when the White House has already paused tariffs on goods covered by the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).
Worse still, Carney refused to outline specific retaliatory measures, instead promising vague “reciprocal” actions by April 2. His ambiguity suggests political posturing rather than a coherent strategy, leaving Canadian industries—particularly auto manufacturers—in limbo.
And adding insult to injury, according to photos published by the Daily Mail, Mark Carney, appears to fancy the company of paedophiles – as he appears happily alongside Jeffrey Epstein’s accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Images published on March 11 by the Daily Mail show that Mark Carney attended the Wilderness Music Festival in Oxfordshire, England, in August 2013, alongside Maxwell, who was sentenced in 2021 to 20 years in prison for sex trafficking.
Your daily reminder that Mark Carney is linked to a child sex-trafficker, Ghislaine Maxwell, the girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein.
Is Carney on the Epstein List? pic.twitter.com/Upo4NLKf9s
— Jack Fonseca (@JackFonsec) March 12, 2025
yogaesoteric
March 29, 2025
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