is ready to "protect its workers" and "fight back" against bully-boy tactics.
Mark Carney, , has set a goal of free trade within the country's 10 provinces and three territories by July 1. It has been threatened by but defiant Mr Carney insists his plans will only benefit Canadians.
"We can give ourselves far more than can ever take away. We can have one economy. This is within our grasp," Mr Carney said, speaking in the country which has long had interprovincial trade barriers. Mr Trump, though, has and make the border between it and the US "disappear".
And Mr Trump's tariffs has fundamentally changed the relationship Canada has had with the US for the past 40 years, Mr Carney continued in an address in Toronto on Thursday.
READ MORE:
Mr Carney, who was governor of the Bank of England from 2013 to 2020, said: "We are facing the biggest crisis of our lifetimes. Donald Trump is trying to fundamentally change the economy, the trading system, but really is he's trying to break us so the US can own us. They want our land, they want our resources, they our water, they want our country. I am ready and I have managed crisis over the years... We will fight back with counter tariffs and we will protect our workers."
Mr Trump’s trade war and have infuriated Canadians and led to a surge in Canadian nationalism that has bolstered Liberal Party poll numbers. Opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre is imploring Canadians not to give the Liberals a fourth term. He hoped to make the election a referendum on Justin Trudeau, whose as food and housing prices rose and immigration surged.
But Mr Carney, 60, became Liberal party leader and prime minister last month after a party leadership race. Since then, , who in recent weeks has repeated his call for Canada to become part of the United States as a solution to the current tariff war.
Speaking in Toronto, Mr Carney added: "Mr Poilievre, you spent years running against Justin Trudeau and the carbon tax and they are both gone. I am a very different person than Justin Trudeau."
Mr Poilievre had accused Mr Carney's Liberals of being hostile toward Canada’s energy sector and pipelines. The 45-year-old politician accused the Liberals of weakening the economy and vowed that a Conservative government would repeal "anti-energy laws, red tape and high taxes."
You may also like
B&M, Home Bargains, Primark, Greggs Easter 2025 opening hours
Viktor Gyokeres makes statement on summer transfer as Arsenal eye special agreement
"Incident is both tragic and alarming": BJP MP Manoj Tiwari on Mustafabad building collapse
"Chargesheet highlights Congress' misuse of power": BJP's Bansuri Swaraj
Most shocking celeb Easter looks from Amanda Holden to Carol Vorderman