Saturday, January 17, 2026

The Face Of Pragmatism

The trade deal that Mark Carney just made with China has elicited a wide range of reactions. There are those who are exultant, such as Scott Moe for what it does for canola exports, and there are others who are predicting doom. The auto industry fears it is the death knell for the Canadian car industry (although it is hard to fathom why the importation of 49,000 Chinese EVs would have such an effect). Captain Canada (a.k.a, Ontario Premier Doug Ford) is thundering against it. And PP is doing his usual posturing about Chinese security threats and how the government has betrayed Canada. However, from where I sit, the deal makes eminent sense.

Carney, embracing pragmatic politics, said this: 

We take the world as it is – not as we wish it to be.”

Which, of course, means recognizing that the United States is no longer a reliable trading partner, a view bolstered this week by Trump's proclamation that the U.S. doesn't need anything from Canada, and that he isn't even thinking about the CUSMA deal. Those who still hold out strong hopes for a renewal of that agreement are, in my view, indulging in magical thinking, and it is an abandonment of that thinking which, I believe, informed Carney's bold move with China. 

The world of realpolitik is not a pretty one. It involves a recognition that ideology can take a country only so far, and in the face of external factors far beyond one's control, it is better to put one's head down and move forward, in this case making deals with countries that don't share our values. Indeed, it can be argued that is exactly what we are doing in our efforts to maintain our trading relationship with the U.S., but given its volatile, insane leadership, the Americans represent diminishing returns.

I am glad Carney has finally understood that appeasing the mad king is pointless. However, the road ahead is still fraught with possible pitfalls. Even though Trump has given his initial 'approval' of Canada making a deal with China, one wonders whether that reaction will change in the coming days. Already, U.S. trade Jamieson Greer sounded an ominous note:

“I think it’s problematic for Canada,” U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer told CNBC Friday morning. “There’s a reason why we don’t sell a lot of Chinese cars in the United States. It’s because we have tariffs to protect American auto workers and Americans from those vehicles.”

    One is reminded of Trump's initial dismissal of Doug Ford's anti-tariff ad in the U.S., only to replace it with anger and the termination of sectoral talks with our country. Similarly, it seems likely that whoever is the current Trump "whisperer" will tell him that his initial response was wrong; after all, the deal might encourage other 'vassal states' to go their own way in trade. The Empire cannot encourage such independent thinking.

    Nonetheless, the risk is well-worth taking, in my view, and this is the first time I have felt some pride in our prime minister. The scales have fallen from his eyes, and he is conducting himself in a way I suspect the majority of Canadians will applaud.



    8 comments:

    1. Do you think the Canadian gas guzzling pickup manufacturers could make reasonably priced EVs?

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. I doubt it, Toby. Profit and more profit is the ruling ethos.

        Delete
      2. Probably not but Toyota set up a plant with no trouble. I don't msee wye someone like BYD could not do something similar—well an auto plant, but not something 50 years behind modern Chinese technology which is what we the US and Europe seem to be using.

        This link lacks the video but it is a good description of what seems to be happening in China. https://kdwalmsley.substack.com/p/chinas-factories-are-in-another-world

        On another topic Ian Welsh seems to agree with you on the Canada-China deal.
        Canadian LapDog Breaks For Exit After Trump Declares Dog Is On The Menu


        Delete
    2. Thanks for the links, Anon. They make for some very interesting reading. I was not aware of the production methods being used in China, but I guess they are not surprising.

      ReplyDelete
    3. The Kevin Walmsley link can be quite fascinating. He covers a lot of subjects but usually with an emphasis on Chinese technology and manufacturing. The other day he was talking aboua "Super Carbon" self-contained steam generator that industries that produce a lot of waste heat can use to generate electricity.

      Of course, the next day he may be discussing how Lockheed Martins drive for efficiency and shareholder value makes them unable to ramp up production of missiles.

      I think he's a partner in a prefabricated home building company in the USA who arrived in China about 12–13 years ago to look around, said YES, opened the Chinese branch of the company to source prefabricated housing components and forgot to leave.

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. Thanks for the information, Anon. I shall keep an eye on his work.

        Delete
    4. We take the world as it is – not as we wish it to be.”
      The most profound message from a Canadian prime minister in years.
      Lets not forget that nowadays China is a technology leader not a copier or even evolving power!
      Their marketing decisions may be that of a 'so called' communist country but they don't differ so much from the rest of the world!
      TB

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. That is so true, TB. In a time that has seen the upending of traditional trading relationships, we have to do what is practical and necessary. Who would have thought we would see the day when, in many ways, the U.S. has become our most immediately dangerous foe?

        Delete