Carney Says China Presents Major Foreign Interference Threat to Canada

Liberal Leader Mark Carney says China poses one of the biggest foreign interference threats to Canada.
Carney made the remarks at a campaign stop in Niagara Falls on April 18.
“It is one of the largest threats with respect to foreign interference, which we have to counter, and we are, we are countering,” Carney told reporters in Niagara Falls.
He said that China is “a threat within a broader Asia and to Taiwan” and that Beijing is supporting Russia’s war in Ukraine.
“So we both have to engage with China and take steps to protect ourselves here,” he said, adding that one of the ways of doing so was to protect the Arctic.
“China is a threat, becoming an emerging threat to the Arctic, which is … one of the reasons why we’ll now have a year-round presence in the Arctic,” Carney told reporters.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has also identified China as a threat to Canada, saying that China has declared itself a “near Arctic state.”
Carney Sees Trade Opportunities in Europe
Carney said the current U.S. tariffs are altering the world economic order and will impact Canada’s relationship with China.
“We’ll end up with different levels of engagement with different countries, depending on the degree of which values are shared,” he said. “There’s a very large gap with respect to China, obviously, which has implications already for our trade and will be going forward.”
He said he believes there are opportunities for Canada to expand its trade with Europe, Asia, and elsewhere.
“There are huge opportunities in Europe, in ASEAN, Mercosur, other parts of the world where we can further deepen [our trade relationships]. And we should, and I think we will,” Carney said, referring to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the Southern Common Market, a South American trade block.
The Conservatives, for their part, have raised questions about Carney’s interactions with Chinese leaders while he was in the private sector.
Carney denied having ever heard of the JCCC and said he never had any meetings with the group. He is often at events where there are “thousands” of people present, but that does not equate to a meeting, he said.
“If somebody happens to be in the room and takes a picture with me, that’s not a meeting,” he added.
The Liberal Party said the JCCC’s claim about an “in-depth” discussion between Carney and the group’s leaders was false. It said it had asked the group remove the claim from its website.
Carney on March 31 said Chiang had apologized and would not be removed as a candidate.
Chinese Information Operation Around Carney
Canada’s Security and Intelligence Threats to Elections (SITE) Task Force said earlier this month that it had detected an “information operation” on Chinese social media platform WeChat “targeting the 45th General Election” and specifically “targeting Mr. Carney” as a candidate.
“The SITE Task Force assesses that the foreign state-backed information operation was intended to influence Canadian-Chinese communities and look to mould perceptions about the candidate [Carney],” said Laurie-Anne Kempton, assistant secretary to the cabinet for communications with the Privy Council Office, during a press conference in Ottawa on April 7.
“This kind of coordinated inauthentic behaviour is just an attempt to pollute the digital environment and try to shape opinions one way or the other,” she added.