logo
Mark Carney says Canadians are not 'impressed' by UK's invite to Trump

Mark Carney says Canadians are not 'impressed' by UK's invite to Trump

BBC News14-05-2025

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has said Canadians were not "impressed" by the UK government's invitation to US President Donald Trump for a second state visit. The newly elected Carney told Sky News that the UK's invitation earlier this year did not help Canadians, who were facing repeat comments from Trump about making Canada the 51st US state. "To be frank, [Canadians] weren't impressed by that gesture... given the circumstance," he said. "It was at a time when we were being quite clear about the issues around sovereignty."Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer invited Trump to come to the UK for a visit during a meeting at the White House in February.
Asked whether the invitation was "appropriate", Carney said that was a decision for the government of the UK and Buckingham Palace."I leave the diplomacy to the UK government," he said.The BBC has contacted the Carney's office and No 10 for comment. Buckingham Palace declined to respond. The criticism from Carney comes as the Canadians prepare to welcome King Charles III and Queen Camilla at the end of this month for a royal visit. During the Sky News interview, Carney said his invitation for the King - Canada's head of state - to attend the opening of Canada's Parliament "is not coincidental". "It is also a reaffirming moment, will be a reaffirming," Carney said, saying issues around Canada's sovereignty "have been accentuated by the president".During his visit, the King will also read the Speech from the Throne - a function usually carried out by the governor general.The last time this happened was in October 1977 when Queen Elizabeth II read the speech for the second time in Canada's history. The first was in 1957.Since returning to the White House, Trump has made repeated comments undermining Canada's sovereignty, including that the Canadian border is an "artificially drawn line".Meanwhile, Carney has firmly said Canada is "not for sale, ever".Carney - who said he would only meet the US president "until we get the respect we deserve" - sat down with Trump in Washington DC last week to begin negotiations on a new trade and security relationship. During the visit, Trump repeated his 51st state comments. Pressed on that, Carney told Sky News that Trump has shifted his tone from "expectation to a desire for that to happen". "He also came from a place where he recognised that was not going to happen."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Saudi Crown Prince MBS will not attend G7 Summit in Canada
Saudi Crown Prince MBS will not attend G7 Summit in Canada

Reuters

time32 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Saudi Crown Prince MBS will not attend G7 Summit in Canada

DUBAI, June 12 (Reuters) - Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's crown prince and de facto leader, will not attend next week's Group of Seven summit in Canada, a senior diplomat briefed on plans told Reuters on Thursday. The crown prince, widely known as MBS, did not give a reason for declining Canada's invitation to the annual gathering, the diplomat said. Saudi Arabia is not a G7 member but can be invited as a guest to its annual gathering, which will be held this year in Kananaskis in the Canadian Rockies, from June 15-17. MBS has rarely travelled internationally in recent years, and declined an invitation to the G7 Summit in Italy last year. He postponed a planned trip to Japan last year, citing concerns over the health of his father, King Salman. Saudi Arabia's government media office did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment. Canada's Globe and Mail newspaper, which first reported that MBS would not join this year's gathering, said the development may ease tensions within Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's Liberal party, where some members of parliament were upset that an invitation had been extended to MBS. The Saudi crown prince has come under heavy criticism for his country's human rights record. The kingdom denies accusations of human rights abuses. Leaders from Ukraine, Mexico, India, Australia, South Africa, South Korea and Brazil are expected to join for parts of the G7 Summit. U.S. President Donald Trump will also be in attendance.

Business live: UK economy shrinks 0.3% in April
Business live: UK economy shrinks 0.3% in April

Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Times

Business live: UK economy shrinks 0.3% in April

Pepco has sold Poundland to the investment firm Gordon Brothers for a 'nominal' sum. The discount chain was put up for sale in March by Pepco, the Warsaw-listed company behind the Poundland and Dealz brands, after sales slowed in what Pepco said was an 'increasingly challenging UK retail landscape'. Gordon Brothers, the former owner of Laura Ashley, had been frontrunners to take control of the retailer. Poundland currently employs around 16,000 staff across over 800 stores across the UK, Isle of Man and Ireland. All stores, colleagues, assets and liabilities of the Poundland business will to Gordon Brothers. Pepco expects to obtain a minority investment interest in the chain, 'subject to the proposed restructuring of Poundland being sanctioned by the High Court in England'. The economy still grew by 0.7 per cent on a rolling three-month measure despite the contraction in April, Mehreen Khan, Economics Editor, writes. This was in line with projections. The ONS said the dominant services sector, which accounted for around three quarters of total GDP, fell by 0.4 per cent on the month, driving the underperformance. Output in production, which included manufacturing, contracted by 0.6 per cent, while the smaller construction industry was the best-performing part of the economy, recording growth of 0.9 per cent. Companies cited the economic uncertainty generated by US tariffs, announced on April 2, and the impact of the rise in payroll taxes at the beginning of the month, the ONS said. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. The chancellor has started a 'war on the private sector', Kemi Badenoch has said. The Conservative leader said that businesses are having to downsize because of Rachel Reeves's policies, such as the national insurance increase. Badenoch refused to commit to reversing the hike, saying that she 'would not have made the mistake in the first place'. 'Uncertainty about tariffs' had contributed to a fall in GDP in April, the month President Trump announced sweeping levies on imports to the United States, Rachel Reeves has said. 'We know that April was a challenging month', the chancellor said. 'There was a huge uncertainty about tariffs, and one of the things if you dig into those GDP numbers today is exports weakening and also production weakening because of that uncertainty in the world around tariffs.' She added that the figures for April were 'disappointing but also perhaps not entirely unexpected, given the uncertainty that is out there in the world at the moment'. A senior adviser at Oxford Economics has said the economy is likely to stay 'sluggish' for the rest of the year. Michael Saunders, a former member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee, told the Radio 4 Today programme: 'The level of interest rates is still quite high, monetary policy is still quite tight, global trade uncertainty is high and that's hitting exports from many countries around the world and the government is tightening fiscal policy. 'Public spending is going up but taxes are going up even more, so the net effect is to reduce demand, and you can see that reflected — that vacancies are falling, job growth is slowing and unemployment is rising. 'The chancellor said the UK was the fastest growing economy in the quarter among the G7 but I don't think that's going to be the case for the year as a whole.' Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG: 'The UK economy lost steam in April amidst global trade disruptions. While the recently announced trade deals offer businesses a degree of policy certainty, tariffs on UK exports to the US are higher than their pre-April levels. This is expected to act as a headwind for UK trade in the medium term.' Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics: 'This won't prompt the Bank of England to cut interest rates next Thursday. But it is one more piece of news pointing to another cut in August.' Rachel Reeves did not rule out further tax rises, despite previously saying there would be no more increases to income tax, VAT or national insurance during this parliament. 'We've drawn a line under the mismanagement from the previous governments,' the chancellor said. She said her actions in the budget were 'necessary' and all the additional spending set out in the review had been costed. 'This government is not increasing taxes on working people,' Reeves said. The chancellor conceded that 'not everybody in all parts of the country is feeling' the effects of growth, but said her budget measures were beginning to have an impact. Referring to the increase in the minimum wage, Rachel Reeves told Sky News: 'Putting more money in the pockets of the poorest is beginning to be felt.' Rachel Reeves admitted the GDP figures were 'clearly disappointing' but insisted her spending review would help deliver growth. 'Our number one mission is delivering growth to put more money in people's pockets through our Plan for Change and while these numbers are clearly disappointing, I'm determined to deliver on that mission,' she said. 'In yesterday's spending review we set out how we'll deliver jobs and growth, whether that's improving city region transport, a record investment in affordable homes or funding Sizewell C nuclear power station. We're investing in Britain's renewal to make working people better off.' The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has fined the firm £1.25 million following an investigation of its audit of Carr's Group 2021 accounts. KPMG partner Nick Plumb has been fined £70,000, discounted for admissions, early disposal and exceptional cooperation to £38,675. The FRC said that KPMG and Plumb breached ethical standards when it relied on the work of 'Firm X', which audited one of Carr's subsidiaries, despite 'Firm X' providing tax and accountancy services to the subsidiary and having held the audit role for more than five years. Sales at Tesco beat quarterly sales expectations in the UK despite operating in what it called an 'intensely competitive' market, Isabella Fish, Retail Editor, writes. Like-for-like sales at the UK's largest supermarket rose 5.1 per cent to £12.3 billion in the first quarter, driven by its Aldi price match scheme and Clubcard deals. Analysts had forecast sales growth of around 4.6 per cent in its UK division. The grocer maintained its profit guidance. Ken Murphy, chief executive, said the company continued to see market share gains in UK, adding that the market 'remains intensely competitive'. In April, he warned of a mounting price war among UK supermarkets, forcing the country's largest grocer to double down on cost cuts and lower its profit forecast for the year. UK economic growth slowed sharply at the start of the second quarter. Month-on-month gross domestic product (GDP) shrank 0.3 per cent in April, data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed. City economists had expected the economy to contract by 0.1 per cent. Liz McKeown, ONS director of economic statistics, said: 'The economy contracted in April, with services and manufacturing both falling. However, over the last three months as a whole, GDP still grew, with signs that some activity may have been brought forward from April to earlier in the year.' The loss of momentum was expected after the economy was boosted in the first three months of the year by front-running of exports to the US ahead of President Trump's 'Liberation day' trade tariffs on April 2. The FTSE 100 is set to open down more than 35 points after a fresh tariff salvo from President Trump and rising tensions in the Middle East offset hopes of a US-China trade truce. Ahead of his July 8 deadline on tariffs, Trump said he would send out letters outlining the terms of trade to dozens of countries, which they could embrace or reject. Trump also said the US was moving staff out of the Middle East, which could be a 'dangerous place', ahead of talks with Iran over its nuclear activity. Tokyo's Nikkei 225 was down 0.6 per cent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.7 per cent and China's SSE Composite was flat. The dollar weakened, and the gold price rose. • Wall Street cautiously welcomed President Trump's declaration of a 'done' deal between the United States and China over raw materials exports after two days of negotiations in London.• Gold overtook the euro to become the second-largest global reserve asset after the dollar last year, according to the European Central Bank, amid rising geopolitical risks and concerns around sanctions.• US private equity group KKR has moved ahead again in the race to own hundreds of doctors' surgeries after increasing its offer for Assura, the NHS landlord, to £1.7 billion.• WSP Global, one of the world's largest consultancy firms, has agreed to buy Ricardo, a smaller London-listed engineering consultancy, for £281 million, delivering a windfall for an activist shareholder that had been seeking to oust the chairman.• Hybrid working has become a 'new normal' for white-collar professionals, but the ability to split time between work and the office is not being enjoyed equally. Younger and older workers and those who live in deprived areas are less likely to do so, the Office for National Statistics has found.• WPP, the UK's largest advertising group, has suffered a new blow after losing a $1.7 billion global media planning and buying contract for Mars to Publicis, its French rival.

Economy shrinks by more than expected amid record fall in exports to the US
Economy shrinks by more than expected amid record fall in exports to the US

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Economy shrinks by more than expected amid record fall in exports to the US

The economy saw the biggest monthly contraction for a year-and-a-half in April as manufacturing activity pulled back sharply amid a record drop in exports to the US following President Donald Trump's tariff hikes. Official figures showed gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 0.3% in April, compared with growth of 0.2% the previous month, and marking the biggest contraction since October 2023. It was also worse than the 0.1% contraction expected by most economists. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said output in Britain's manufacturing sector dropped by 0.6% in April, having surged earlier in the year as US importers stocked up ahead of Mr Trump's tariff rises, which came into effect at the start of April. Exports to America fell at the fastest pace on record, down £2 billion in April – led by machinery and transport, including cars, according to separate trade figures from the ONS on Thursday. ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown said: 'After increasing for each of the four preceding months, April saw the largest monthly fall on record in goods exports to the US with decreases seen across most types of goods, following the recent introduction of tariffs.' The wider economy also shrank as the all-important services sector saw activity fall by by 0.4% in April. The ONS said this was largely pulled lower by a drop off in demand in the housing market following the rush to complete property deals ahead of the stamp duty change from April 1. Chancellor Rachel Reeves acknowledged that the latest GDP figures were 'clearly disappointing', but insisted her spending review would help deliver growth. She said: 'Our number one mission is delivering growth to put more money in people's pockets through our plan for change, and while these numbers are clearly disappointing, I'm determined to deliver on that mission.' The fall in GDP also comes after soaring wage cost pressures from April, with the increase in national insurance contributions (NICs) and the minimum wage both taking effect at the start of the month, which has hit the service sector particularly hard. Ms McKeown said declining output in services and manufacturing sectors both dragged on overall GDP in April. 'However, over the last three months as a whole GDP still grew, with signs that some activity may have been brought forward from April to earlier in the year,' she said. She added: 'Both legal and real estate firms fared badly in April, following a sharp increase in house sales in March when buyers rushed to complete purchases ahead of changes to stamp duty. 'Car manufacturing also performed poorly after growing in the first quarter of the year.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store