Winston Churchill once stood before a nation on the brink and thundered:
“We shall fight on the beaches… we shall never surrender.”
He meant every word.
And then there’s Mark Carney.
A man sold to Canadians as the calm in the storm. A “master negotiator” who would navigate crises, defend our interests, and strike a deal with President Donald Trump.
But when the waves came crashing?
He grabbed a duck floatie and went quiet.
Let’s review the facts:
• Trump just signed a new trade deal with the EU.
• He’s made progress with Japan and India.
• With Canada? Washington says “virtually no progress has been made.”
Meanwhile, Canadian workers are taking it on the chin:
• Trump has slapped a 35% tariff on softwood lumber and non-CUSMA goods.
• Steel, copper, and aluminum now face tariffs as high as 50%.
And Carney? He’s talking about “nation-building projects” but refuses to repeal the Liberal bans on pipelines and oil tankers—projects that could actually build the nation.
Last Friday, as the economic news worsened, Carney ducked the media. His “solution”? Send François-Philippe Champagne and Anita Anand on a mission to Mexico.
This is not leadership. It’s stage acting.
Churchill faced bullets.
Carney dodges decisions.
“Excuses are tools for the incompetent.”
And Carney is full of them.
He’s not Churchill.
He’s not even a convincing understudy.
Canada deserves better.
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