
Canada’s Globalist PM Carney Bows to Beijing, Praises Xi, and Hails a “New World Order” While Pushing Away America
Canada’s globalist Prime Minister Mark Carney’s long-anticipated trip to Beijing appears to be marked by a striking pivot away from Canada’s traditional alliances and toward deeper engagement with Communist China.
Claimed by Carney as a necessary adjustment to a “new world order,” the visit instead underscored Ottawa’s growing willingness to accommodate Beijing—and push away the United States—at a moment of geopolitical upheaval.
The prime minister of America’s neighbor to the north gushed over Chinese President Xi Jinping, praising his “leadership” during public remarks—language that raised eyebrows both at home and abroad.
For a North American leader—and the head of state of a 5 eyes country—to laud the head of a one-party authoritarian state was seen as slightly more than mere diplomatic courtesy. It looked like deference.
The visit was the first by a Canadian prime minister to China in eight years and comes amid deeply strained relations with America.
Rather than attempting to mend ties with Canada’s closest ally and largest trading partner, Carney seemed eager to showcase Beijing as a strategic alternative—a move that looks like the application of globalist pressure on the Trump administration.
Speaking alongside Chinese officials in a press conference, Carney celebrated what he called “rapid progress” in Canada-China relations. He pointed to cooperation across energy, agriculture, finance, and so-called people-to-people exchanges, hinting at a broad re-alignment of Canadian economic priorities.
I would like to know exactly what Mark Carney means when he says Canada’s partnership with China “sets us up well for the New World Order.”
“Mine is the first visit of a Canadian Prime Minister to China in nearly a decade. The world has changed much since that last visit.
“And… pic.twitter.com/B8NDoa4QM7
— Billboard Chris 🌎 (@BillboardChris) January 15, 2026