Canada's Mark Carney prepares to take Western anti-Trump mantle

Finally, Canada was elected as many as the one in the White House, just like the one in the Ottawa Prime Minister.

The profits are very thin, but the Canadian's verdict is clear. As President Donald Trump’s tariffs threaten the foundations of his economy, voters want Canadian leaders to become central banks involved in the global financial crisis and Brexit.

Mark Carney, who was not a member of parliament until Monday night, is now carrying out a mandate to lead a minority government to face Trump. He has promised "extensive renegotiation" of security and trade relations with Canada's closest allies and largest trading partner, the United States.

"We are once again in one of the hinged moments of history," Carney told cheerful supporters at a victory rally in Ottawa. "Our old relationship with the United States, based on stable integration, is over."

Carney said that "American betrayal" was a tragedy, "but it is also our new reality."

"The United States wants our land, our resources, our water, our country. These are not idle threats."

In Justin Trudeau's progressive politics, Carney decisively pushed the Liberal Party to the center and put Canadian sovereignty and opposition to Trump (who once threatened to annex the country) at the heart of voters.

"It's a very serious election and these problems are almost there," Canadian Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chrétien told the Financial Times from 1993 to 2003. "Mr. Carney's mission is clear and Canadians want him to bear the threat from Mr. Trump," he said.

Carney’s victory will resonate outside Canada, especially in the Western capital and global boardrooms, the former Goldman Sachs executive is already known in the number – now a powerful figure in the world leader ready to stand up.

Italian politician Sandro Gozi, who led the liberal elections in Europe last year, said Carney's victory was "the first victory of democracy, defeating Washington's new, unacceptable imperialism and bullish action."

"It can inspire other countries," Gotz said. "Carney's victory is crucial. Not only for Canada, but for all Democrats around the world."

Canadians mocking and tariffs on Trump, pulling Napa Valley wine from liquor stores and booing the U.S. national anthem at the ice hockey game.

As of early Tuesday morning, the Liberals are expected to win 168 seats in the 343-seat House of Commons, far exceeding 144 seats, but less than the majority.

The minority government will face challenges for Carney. His priority must be to negotiate a voting agreement with partners such as the New Democratic Party, which currently keeps his Premier League residency.

The New Democrats also supported Trudeau's last administration and are expected to win seven seats. Although its leader Jagmeet Singh resigned after failing to win a seat, the left-wing parties will have a balance of power and may make Carney ransom policy and legislation.

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh and his wife Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu on election night ©Chris Helgren/Reuters

According to CBC, the U.S. president’s looming election Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has been ahead of the polls in the polls until early this year, losing his seat.

Other right-wing parties will closely monitor the reversal of Poilievre's fate, which may be even more important to closely link with Trump.

Even as Canadians participated in the poll on Monday, Trump urged voters to elect a leader that will make the country the 51st state because “that should have been.” A Carney adviser said Trump's intervention was a "gift" to former central bankers.

"Mark Carney is with me at school," Jim Himes, a representative in Connecticut, said on X. "If I say to him, 'Mark, one day Donald Trump will be the president of the United States, he's going to make you the Prime Minister of Canada on the one hand,' he'll call the campus to take me home."

Carney will hold a G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alberta in June, in an era of particularly tense among world leaders, and Trump is looking to travel to Canada.

Trudeau resigned from nearly a decade of power just weeks after Trump returned to the White House in January.

Pierre Poilievre and his wife Anaida Poilievre at the Conservative Party’s election night party ©Geoff Robins/AFP/Getty Images

Carney, who replaced Trudeau in March at the Liberal Party’s helmsman, quickly gained his mark and removed the unpopular carbon tax, one of Poilievre’s main attacks on liberals.

Trump's trade war began with a widespread tariff threat to Canada and Mexico, and proved to be Carney's opportunity.

Carney, a former goalkeeper for Harvard and Oxford hockey teams, mentioned a slogan against Trump, an aggressive stance on the ice: “Canadian elbow.”

Chrétien praised Carney for his performance on the campaign. “He kept calm and controlled because he was doing very well,” he said.

Carney has promised to make Canada “the strongest economy in the G7”, although many voters are frustrated by the pace of growth.

The novice politician spent three decades of careers on Wall Street and operating the central bank and now has to negotiate with Trump and the Canadian economy through a global trade war.

He has promised to reduce major internal trade barriers in Canada and establish new trade alliances in Asia and Europe to drive the Canadian economy from over-reliance on the United States.

Voters lined up outside the polling station in Ottawa on Monday ©Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images

After decades of in-depth integration with the United States, managing the economy through this transition will be a challenge.

"The public is behind him now, but political support is often a reduced resource," said Roland Paris, a professor at the University of Ottawa and a former consultant to Trudeau. "Many of Carney's commitments will take years of concerted efforts to achieve."

Paris added that Carney will have to try to maintain Canada's automotive industry, which is threatened by tariffs and improve productivity and balance resource exports with environmental concerns.

Janice Stein, founding director of the School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at Toronto, said anger and fear drove Canadians to vote for Carney, but his picky campaign could lead to difficulties in the government.

Given the economic connection with the United States and the integration of the national supply chain, she said, “Leading the 'rebels' role to the United States is a role that no Canadian Prime Minister can afford.” “Divorce is simply impossible.”