Canada turns to China as Trump's tariffs and threats bring old foes together - BRAVE MAG

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Friday, January 16, 2026

Canada turns to China as Trump's tariffs and threats bring old foes together

Image: CHINA-CANADA-DIPLOMACY (Adek Berry / AFP via Getty Images)

BEIJING — With U.S. ties at their lowest point in modern history, Canada is turning to one of the only countries with which it had even worse relations:China.

Canada is forging a "new strategic partnership" with China, its second-biggest trading partner, Prime MinisterMark Carneysaid Friday during what he called a "historic" trip to Beijing. That includes a break with the United States on tariffs, which have hit both the Canadian and Chinese economies.

Carney, the first Canadian prime minister to visit China since 2017, met with PresidentXi Jinpingat the Great Hall of the People. He is one of a series of world leaders shaken by PresidentDonald Trump's geopolitical disruptions who are traveling to Beijing as it seeks to exploit U.S. unpredictability to bolster its global influence.

For Canada, the Trump administration has been especially head-spinning.

"The United States used to be a friend and ally," Guy Saint-Jacques, a former Canadian ambassador to China, told NBC News in an interview. Now, "we are treated as an enemy."

Cutting tariffs

Carney's trip follows years of frosty relations over Beijing's lengthydetention of two Canadiansregarded as hostages as well as allegations of Chineseinterference in Canadian politics.

Those tensions slowed investment and left Canada "even more dependent on our largest trading partner," Carney said, referring to the U.S., which is now the object ofextraordinary Canadian angerandboycottsafter a year of insults and threats by Trump.

As part of an effort to "recalibrate" the relationship, Carney said Canada had agreed to cut its 100% tariff on Chinese electric cars in return for lower tariffs on Canadian farm products.

It's a major shift for Canada, a major auto producer that in 2024 followed the U.S. inimposing the 100% tariff.

Carney said Canadians would also be allowed to travel to China visa-free.

CHINA-BEIJING-XI JINPING-CANADA-PM-MEETING (CN) (Xie Huanchi / Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images file)

During their meeting earlier Friday, Xi told Carney that China was willing to strengthen coordination "to jointly address global challenges."

Carney, who called China his country's biggest security threat while campaigning for office last year, said Friday that the global security landscape "continues to change."

"In a world that's more dangerous and divided, we face many threats," he said.

Though Canada's relationship with the U.S. is much deeper and broader, Carney said, ties with China were now "more predictable."

A 'tough spot' for Canada

Canada-China relations went into a "deep freeze" in 2018 when China arrested the two Canadians, former diplomatMichael Kovrigand entrepreneur Michael Spavor, said Lynette Ong, a professor of Chinese politics at the University of Toronto.

Their detention came days after Canadaarrested Meng Wanzhou, an executive at the Chinese tech giant Huawei, at the request of U.S. officials seeking her extradition on fraud charges. Kovrig and Spavor, who wereaccused of spying, spent almost three years in Chinese detention before beingreleased in 2021, hours after Meng made a deal with the Justice Department.

Image: People hold signs calling for China to release Canadian detainees Spavor and Kovrig during an extradition hearing for Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou at the B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver (Lindsey Wasson / Reuters file)

"Even after the two Michaels were released, people did not warm up to China at all," Ong said.

Then Trump returned to the White House last January.

Within days, heimposed a 25% tariffon most Canadian goods and started talking about making Canada, a nation of 40 million people, the51st U.S. state.

U.S.-Canada trade talks have been on hold since October, when Trump cut them off in anger over ananti-tariff adproduced by the Ontario government.

Mark Carney and President Donald  (Geoff Robins  / AFP - Getty Images file)

Canadian public opinion on China isbecoming more positiveeven asgoodwill toward the U.S. plummets, according to polling by thePew Research Center. Last year, 34% of Canadian survey respondents had a favorable opinion of China, up from 21% in 2024 before Trump took office.

An equal proportion of respondents had a favorable opinion of America, down from 54%.

Though thesame pattern can be seenin a number of countries around the world, in Canada "the flip is especially obvious," Ong said.

Canadian officials say they are seeking to grow non-U.S. trade by at least 50% over the next 10 years.

"Further trade engagement with China should first and foremost be seen as diversification away from the United States," Ong said.

About 75% of Canada's manufactured goods exports go to the U.S., according to government figures. China is the second-largest market at about 4%.

Though Canada is seeking to increase exports to a number of countries — includingIndia, where Carney has also been trying toimprove strained relations— a major priority is China, where imports of Canadian goods fell more than 10% last year, according to Chinese customs data released Wednesday.

The two countries made a major step forward in October when the leaders met on the sidelines of a regional summit inSouth Korea, where Xi invited Carney to Beijing.

The speed with which Carney went to China "reflects a sense of urgency," said Saint-Jacques, the former ambassador. "He knows that Canada is in a tough spot."

Image: ***BESTPIX*** Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney Meets With Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing (Vincent Thian / Getty Images)

Showing the U.S. that Canada has other options for its exports, he said, could put Carney in a stronger position as the U.S., Canada and Mexico begin a "joint review" of their free trade agreement, known as the USMCA. Trump this week dismissed the agreement, which he praised when it was announced during his first term, as "irrelevant."

At the same time, "Canadians know also that China is a very difficult partner," Saint-Jacques said. "We know very well how they can contravene international rules."

Saint-Jacques said that in his meeting with Xi, Carney would "emphasize the need to put pressure on Putin to accept a ceasefire in the war in Ukraine," in addition to discussing China's relationship withNorth Koreaand expressing support for the Beijing-claimed island ofTaiwan.

Like the U.S., Canada has no official ties with Taiwan, a self-governing democracy, but supports it in the face of Chinese pressure.

Carney said Friday that he had raised human rights issues such as last month's conviction ofHong Kong democracy activist Jimmy Lai.

But he added: "We take the world as it is, not as we wish it to be."

Janis Mackey Frayer reported from Beijing, and Jennifer Jett from Hong Kong.