Carney's Beijing Bow: From Banker to Beijing's Best Friend – Canada's Surrender to the Chinese Empire's "New World Order" By Charles Taylor (Florida)

The headlines from Beijing are chilling for anyone who values Western sovereignty and rejects the creeping globalist empire-building of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney — yes, the former Bank of England governor turned political "saviour" — has just wrapped a historic four-day visit to China, the first by a Canadian leader in nearly a decade. In meetings with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang, Carney didn't just mend fences; he practically rolled out the red carpet for Beijing's vision of a multipolar world dominated by authoritarian state capitalism. His own words seal the deal: "The progress that we have made in the partnership sets us up well for the new world order."

Worse than Trudeau? Absolutely. Trudeau flirted with admiration for China's "basic dictatorship" and let CCP influence seep into elections and institutions, but Carney is taking it to the next level — actively defecting from the crumbling Western alliance to embrace the CCP's blueprint for global dominance. This isn't pragmatic trade diversification in response to U.S. tariffs under Trump; it's a strategic pivot that hands Canada over as a willing vassal in Xi's imperial project.

Carney's trip, arriving in Beijing mid-January 2026, was billed as repairing ties strained since the 2018 Huawei/Meng Wanzhou fiasco and subsequent retaliatory detentions and tariffs. But the outcomes scream capitulation. Canada slashes tariffs on up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles to a preferential 6.1% rate (down from 100% imposed under Trudeau in lockstep with the U.S.), while China eases duties on Canadian canola seed to around 15% (from punishing highs) and drops barriers on canola meal, peas, seafood, and more. Deals on clean energy cooperation, fossil fuel exports, forestry, tourism, and visa-free travel for Canadians to China were inked or promised. Carney hails it as unlocking billions in exports, but let's call it what it is: flooding Canada with subsidised CCP EVs (built on stolen tech and Uyghur forced labour) while Canada exports raw resources to fuel Beijing's machine.

This "new strategic partnership" isn't mutual benefit — it's asymmetrical surrender. Carney frames it as adapting to "new global realities" where the old multilateral system is "eroded" and "like-minded countries" form coalitions. Translation: The West's post-WWII order is dead, long live the Sino-centric one. By cosying up to Xi — praising his leadership, calling ties "more predictable" than with the chaotic U.S. — Carney signals Canada's readiness to join the "new world order" where the CCP sets the rules: mass surveillance as "harmony," debt-trap diplomacy as "win-win," and territorial aggression in the South China Sea or Taiwan as "core interests."

From an anti-globalist, anti-Chinese empire perspective, this is betrayal on steroids. Trudeau was bad — weak on foreign interference, soft on human rights—but Carney, the Davos darling with UN climate envoy creds, brings elite sophistication to the sell-out. His push to double non-U.S. exports by 2035 (with China as the prize) ignores the CCP's track record: ensnaring nations via Belt and Road debt traps, stealing IP, and punishing critics (Australia's wine tariffs, Lithuania's trade blockade). Allowing Chinese state firms deeper into Canadian energy, agriculture, and tech hands strategic assets to an adversary that views Canada as a resource colony and influence target.

Carney's defenders say it's realism — Trump's tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminium, autos, and lumber force diversification. Fair, but why pivot to the biggest threat? Why not India, Japan, or Europe? Instead, Carney echoes CCP talking points, downplaying human rights (he raised Hong Kong activist Jimmy Lai's case but shrugged, "We take the world as it is") while boosting economic entanglement that gives Beijing leverage over Canadian policy.

This is the real New World Order nightmare: Western leaders like Carney defecting not through coercion but ideological alignment — globalist technocrats seeing authoritarian efficiency as the future. Canada, once a beacon of liberal democracy, now props up the Chinese empire's ambitions. Anti-globalists must wake up: Reject this partnership, demand transparency on CCP influence in Ottawa, and push for true sovereignty — alliances with free nations, not empires that crush dissent.

Carney isn't saving Canada; he's selling it. If this "strategic partnership" sets the West up for anything, it's subjugation under Beijing's boot. Time to reject the mania of globalist surrender and fight for nations that remain free. What happens when the dragon demands more than canola and EVs? Ask the Canadians who still believe in liberty — they're running out of time.

https://www.independent.co.uk/asia/china/china-canada-mark-carney-xi-jinping-trade-talks-b2901628.html