â–º Key Points – Canada Strong Will Make America Great Again
- Canadian PM Mark Carney delivered a high-profile speech in New York on May 28, 2026, pitching Canada as a partner that can help the U.S. grow stronger
- Carney said a “strong Canada will help make America great again”, calling for a renewed partnership in aluminum, automobiles, critical minerals, and energy
- He argued that Canada distancing itself from overreliance on the U.S. is actually good for both nations, creating a more balanced and resilient relationship
- Carney stated that Canada buys more American goods than China, Japan, and Germany combined, directly challenging Trump’s tariff justification
- The speech comes ahead of the CUSMA trade deal review, with Carney offering specific, practical proposals to Washington
- Canada has also committed to $500 billion in defense and security spending over the next decade, addressing a key U.S. complaint about burden sharing
- Trump responded positively, saying the two nations had a “very, very good talk” and that things will “work out well”
By TrenBuzz Staff  · May 29, 2026  · 3 min read
It was the line that stopped a room full of Wall Street investors cold. Standing before the Economic Club of New York on May 28, 2026, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney looked across the audience and delivered four words that nobody expected from Ottawa: “make America great again.” Not as a slogan stolen from a political rival. As an economic argument. As a pitch. As a challenge to Washington to stop treating its largest trading partner like a threat.
The Carney New York speech on Canada US trade 2026 was one of the most strategically calculated foreign policy addresses a Canadian prime minister has delivered on American soil in a generation. And it came with a twist that flipped the entire framing of the Canada-U.S. relationship on its head.
The Argument: Canada Distancing Is Good for the U.S.
For months, Carney has been telling Canadians that their country must reduce its overreliance on the United States. Washington interpreted that as a threat. In New York, Carney reframed it as a gift. A more self-sufficient, resilient Canada, he argued, is a stronger partner and a less burdensome ally for America to carry.
He pointed to concrete numbers that are hard to dismiss. Canada is America’s largest customer, buying more goods from the United States than China, Japan, and Germany combined. Canadian energy exports to the U.S., he said, are the equivalent of ten Hoover Dams worth of power. He asked plainly whether it made more sense to build that replacement capacity inside the U.S. or keep buying it from Canada at lower cost.
The CUSMA Clock Is Ticking
The speech landed at a critical moment. The review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade deal, known as CUSMA, is drawing closer, and both sides are positioning for what could be a bruising renegotiation. Carney confirmed that Ottawa has already submitted specific, practical proposals to the Trump administration on sectors including automobiles, critical minerals, agriculture, and aluminum.
He also confirmed that Canada is pressing ahead with new trade deals beyond the U.S., having already announced plans for twelve new international trade agreements since taking office. That diversification strategy, Carney argued, does not weaken the Canada-U.S. relationship. It strengthens Canada’s hand going into it.
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Trump Responds Warmly. For Now.
The early reaction from Washington was more positive than many analysts expected. Trump said he had a “very, very good talk” with Carney and expressed confidence that things would “work out very well between Canada and the United States.” That is a notably warmer tone than the Oval Office tension that accompanied their first meeting in October 2025.
Whether the warmth survives the CUSMA review is another matter. Trump has repeatedly threatened additional tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum, and automobiles. Carney is betting that framing Canada’s strength as America’s gain will change the political math in Washington before the review reaches a flashpoint. The New York speech was the opening move in what will likely be a long negotiation.
Disclaimer: This article is intended for informational and news reporting purposes only. The content is based on publicly available information sourced from credible news agencies including Reuters, Global News, NPR, and Concept Clarity News as of May 28 to 29, 2026, and does not constitute financial, trade, or political advice. TrenBuzz.com does not endorse any government, trade policy, or political position. All trademarks and names belong to their respective owners. Content is produced in compliance with Google AdSense publisher policies.