Carney Heads to G7 Summit Amid Uncertain U.S.-Canada Relations and Global Tensions
Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to attend the annual G7 summit in Évian-les-Bains, France, from June 15–17, 2026, marking the final stop on his week-long diplomatic tour of France and Ireland. While an official bilateral meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump has not yet been confirmed, the summit comes at a critical juncture for Canada-U.S. relations, with trade tensions, NATO disagreements, and global security concerns dominating the agenda.
Trade and Diplomacy Take Center Stage
Carney’s appearance at the G7 follows his signing of an intelligence-sharing agreement with France on Friday, where he emphasized that “the next world order would likely be built from Europe.” His broader strategy focuses on diversifying Canada’s trade partnerships to reduce reliance on the United States—a goal underscored by the looming July 1 deadline for renewing the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), which may pass without a new deal.
Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre criticized Carney’s approach, arguing that domestic regulatory barriers—not European exclusion—are preventing Canadian energy exports to Europe. “Why can’t we bring our goods to Europe? It’s not because the Europeans are excluding us,” Poilievre said. “That’s because the Liberal government is locking us in with anti-development laws.”
Global Crises Loom Over the Summit
The summit unfolds against a backdrop of escalating global instability. President Trump arrives just one day after announcing a U.S.-brokered peace deal with Iran, mediated by Pakistan, which calls for an immediate end to military operations across all fronts, including Lebanon. However, the agreement’s future is uncertain following Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon on Saturday. A signing ceremony was reportedly planned for Friday in Switzerland.
Meanwhile, the U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—recently lifted as part of the Iran deal—has already impacted global oil prices, affecting G7 economies. The issue of trade imbalances with China will also be a key focus, especially after major factory closures in Germany linked to Chinese overproduction. Carney participated in a high-level phone call last Thursday hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron, involving U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Guoqing to discuss macroeconomic stabilization—widely interpreted as code for coordinated responses to China’s trade practices.
Tech Regulation and AI Sovereignty on the Agenda
Another point of divergence between Canada and the U.S. may emerge over digital policy. Canada, France, and the U.K. have all introduced legislation imposing age restrictions on social media platforms—a move not mirrored in the U.S. Several leading tech CEOs, including OpenAI’s Sam Altman, Anthropic’s Dario Amodei, Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, and Cohere’s Aidan Gomez, are attending the summit.
Notably, Anthropic recently restricted foreign access to its most advanced AI models, citing U.S. export controls. This decision could accelerate discussions among G7 nations about developing sovereign AI capabilities to reduce dependence on American technology.
No Joint Communiqué Expected
Unlike previous years, no joint communiqué from G7 leaders is anticipated at the conclusion of this year’s meeting—a sign of deepening geopolitical fractures. Thousands of protesters gathered in Geneva on Sunday ahead of the summit, organized by the No-G7 coalition. Though initially peaceful, the demonstration turned violent when a Tesla was set on fire and clashes erupted with police. Authorities had taken extensive precautions, including boarding up storefronts and deploying heavy security, recalling the unrest seen during the 2003 anti-G8 protests.
As Carney prepares to engage with Trump and European allies, experts like Carleton University’s Fen Hampson stress the importance of securing a substantive bilateral meeting. “A serious conversation between the two will be a very important indication of the future tenor of bilateral relations,” Hampson noted. With trade, security, and technology policy hanging in the balance, the Évian summit may prove pivotal for Canada’s place in a shifting global order.