Prime Minister Mark Carney’s private message to U.S. President Donald Trump should be clear:聽鈥淐anada gives you leverage over China and Europe. Partnering with us enhances your hand abroad and secures wins at home,鈥 writes Alan Kessel.
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s private message to U.S. President Donald Trump should be clear:聽鈥淐anada gives you leverage over China and Europe. Partnering with us enhances your hand abroad and secures wins at home,鈥 writes Alan Kessel.
Alan Kessel is a former legal adviser to the Government of Canada and deputy high commissioner of Canada to the United Kingdom. He is also a senior fellow at the Macdonald Laurier Institute and a contributor to the Center for North American Prosperity and Security.
When Prime Minister Mark Carney travels to Washington on Tuesday to meet President Donald Trump, it will be more than a diplomatic courtesy call. It will be a pivotal test of Canada鈥檚 ability to navigate the fault lines of a shifting world order 鈥 and to assert its sovereign leadership in North America.
Carney鈥檚 trip comes just weeks before 鈥 a once-in-seven-years opportunity to shape the agenda of the world鈥檚 leading democracies. Rarely has that convening carried higher stakes. With Trump鈥檚 return to the Oval Office, America鈥檚 relationship with its G7 partners is strained anew by protectionism, tariffs, and a transactional approach to alliances. Meanwhile, G6 members 鈥 Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan 鈥 are struggling to defend the principles of open markets and collective security that have underpinned prosperity for generations.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Washington on Monday ahead of talks with US President Donald Trump. The two leaders will meet Tuesday. (AP Video / May 5, 2025)
Carney鈥檚 challenge is clear. In Washington, and at Kananaskis, he must pursue two interlocking missions:
鈥 First, he must bring President Trump constructively into the G7 framework 鈥 not by confrontation, but through pragmatism and mutual interest.
鈥 Second, he must demonstrate that Canada is not a junior partner, but an indispensable North American power with sovereign leverage and global alliances that matter.
The path forward begins Tuesday.
Carney鈥檚 strength lies in his credibility. As a former G7 central banker, he speaks the language of economic power 鈥 and he knows how markets reward stability and punish isolation. His private message to Trump should be simple: you want wins at home and Canada can help deliver them. Undermining us weakens your hand, not ours.
The strategy should rest on three pillars:
First, design an agenda Trump can鈥檛 resist
Rather than boxing him into multilateral communiqu茅s, Carney should offer modular initiatives that allow selective buy-in: North American energy security, joint infrastructure finance, and supply chain resilience. These aren鈥檛 abstract goals 鈥 they mean American jobs and strategic independence. They are also areas where Canada brings assets no other ally can match: critical minerals, energy resources, and Arctic security.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney headed to Washington on Monday ahead of talks with US President Donald Trump. Carney's visit will be watched closely by Canadians infuriated by Trump 鈥 and by an anxious business community looking for tariff relief. (AP Video / May 5, 2025)
Second, showcase Canada鈥檚 bilateral leverage
Carney should propose concrete Canada-U. S. agreements 鈥 energy corridors, Arctic surveillance, cross-border infrastructure 鈥 that give Trump tangible victories. These remind Washington that Canada is not replaceable. Our proximity, resources, and security commitments through Norad make us a cornerstone of continental stability.
Third, position Canada as the G6鈥檚 North American voice
In the run-up to Kananaskis, Carney must co-ordinate tightly with G6 partners to maintain unity on core issues. But in Washington and in public, he should project steadiness and mediation, not antagonism. Canada can be the hinge between Washington and its oldest allies 鈥 the nation that keeps the table together when others walk away.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
The public message, both in Washington and back home, should be unequivocal:聽鈥淐anada strengthens North America by leading with global alliances, not retreating from them.鈥澛燭he private message to Trump should be equally clear:聽鈥淐anada gives you leverage over China and Europe. Partnering with us enhances your hand abroad and secures wins at home.鈥
Kananaskis is Canada鈥檚 stage, but the choreography begins Tuesday in Washington. The eyes of allies and rivals alike will be on how Carney navigates this moment. Does Canada have the confidence to assert its leadership? Can it broker a G7 agenda that advances global resilience through North American strength?
Leadership is not granted 鈥 it is seized. Carney鈥檚 trip to Washington is the first step. If he succeeds, Kananaskis will be remembered not just as a summit of scenery, but as the place where Canada redefined its role on the continent and in the world.
Alan Kessel is a former legal adviser to the Government of Canada and deputy high commissioner of Canada to the United Kingdom. He is also a senior fellow at the Macdonald Laurier Institute and a contributor to the Center for North American Prosperity and Security.
Opinion articles are based on the author鈥檚 interpretations and judgments of facts, data and events. More details
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