The CCP's backdoor to America.
Right after Trump’s post on Truth Social, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney made a U-turn, which was also in response to Trump’s withdrawing his invitation for Carney to join his Gaza “Board of Peace.” Carney was dumped because he called for a diplomatic revolt against America to serve his own Marxist, globalist agenda. While in Davos, Carney called upon “like-minded middle powers” to “band together to push their priorities on the world stage,” specifically against the U.S. for “weaponizing” economics. Before he arrived in Davos, Carney’s trip to China likely emboldened him to antagonize Trump. In China, Carney wrapped up deals with the Communist regime. According to a report in the National Post, Carney “identified the key to dealing with the Chinese Communists on a level playing field: give them everything they want, and more.”
Based on Trump’s most recent statement at the G-7 leaders summit, it looked as though any “misunderstandings” between Carney and Trump were put aside, and a calm is prevailing between the two neighbors, but one must remember that Carney’s hostilities toward Trump were only buried because of Trump’s retaliatory threat. “Trump says he ‘could understand’ Canada’s cap on Chinese electric vehicle imports,” by Brian Platt, National Post, June 17, 2026:
U.S. President Donald Trump is happy with Canada’s arrangement to allow a capped number of Chinese electric vehicles to be imported at a low-tariff rate, Prime Minister Mark Carney said.
When asked about Carney’s comment, Trump didn’t express explicit approval, but said he could understand the quota.
The deal, unveiled during Carney’s trip to Beijing in January, allows as many as 49,000 Chinese EVs in a 12-month period at a tariff rate of around 6 per cent, with that quota to climb gradually over time. Prior to this year, Canada had a tariff of more than 100% on those vehicles.
“He likes the structure, actually,” Carney told reporters at the Group of Seven leaders summit in Evian, France, on Wednesday. “We had a follow-up conversation.”
A hot mic captured Carney talking to Trump on Tuesday about the China deal and explaining how it capped the number of imported cars. “I thought you’d actually like that,” Carney was heard saying. Trump appeared to agree, saying “that’s good.”…
Canadians who know the truth about Carney are aware that this apparently positive attitude toward Trump is only a useful veneer. Carney’s character was aptly described in an Edmonton Journal article before he became prime minister: --->READ MORE HERECarney’s Secret Police Deal With People’s Republic Of China Shows Extraordinary Carelessness Or Worse
Hong Kong Diaspora Groups Sound the Alarm on Carney’s Secret PRC Police Deal—The Bureau’s Reporting Already Proves Them Right
Ten Hong Kong diaspora organizations—spanning Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Europe—have issued an extraordinary open letter to the Government of Canada expressing “deep fear and anxiety” over Mark Carney’s deal on law enforcement cooperation signed between the RCMP and the Ministry of Public Security of the People’s Republic of China.
The letter, released February 12, is a plea from communities that fled Chinese state repression and now fear that Carney’s Liberal government has formalized cooperation with the very security apparatus that drove them from their homes—without telling them what the deal contains, what safeguards exist, or who is watching.
What makes this open letter so significant is that the concerns it raises are not speculative. They are already powerfully evidenced in The Bureau’s reporting—based on classified documents, federal intelligence assessments, and the expert analysis of former senior RCMP officer Garry Clement, who spent nearly five decades in policing, intelligence, and financial-crime investigations, including professional experience in Asia.
Ottawa says the “memorandum of understanding” with Beijing is meant to “enhance cooperation on corruption and transnational crimes, including cyber and telecommunications fraud, synthetic drugs, narcotics trafficking, and money laundering,” and to “continue bilateral law enforcement working-level engagement between the two sides.”
But Hong Kong diaspora groups say formal cooperation with China’s Ministry of Public Security is not a neutral technical partnership. For communities that fled repression, it can only mean deeper engagement with an internal security apparatus that has provably been exported into Western nations and is now associated—through lived experience—with “surveillance, harassment, intimidation, and pressure” directed at Hong Kongers overseas and their families.
They explain that the inescapable effect is immediate and corrosive: even “the perception of closer engagement” between Canadian agencies and Chinese security authorities chills “free expression, civic participation, journalism, and advocacy,” and drives vulnerable people out of public life.
“Trust between law enforcement and diaspora communities is essential,” they add—and without confidence their privacy and safety are protected, communities may hesitate to report crimes or work with police. --->READ MORE HEREFollow link below to a relevant story:
+++++Carney caught on hot mic pitching Chinese EV import deal to Trump at G7+++++
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