Politics
Will China and Canada ease their tariffs? What’s at stake in Carney visit TenX News
With U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs forcing Canada to seek other trading partners, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit to China is raising questions about whether some tariffs between Beijing and Ottawa could soon ease in what one expert is calling a “test” for where relations may go.
Canada’s rocky relationship with China has spanned several years, and pre-dates the global trade war sparked by Trump’s tariffs.
But recent diplomatic tension, including the arbitrary detention of two Canadians as well as the executions last year of four Canadians by Beijing, coupled with pressure from the U.S. for allies to crack down on trade with China have spurred rounds of tariffs between Canada and China covering industries like agriculture and electric vehicles.
Carney’s trip comes just days after an Ipsos poll done exclusively for Global News found 54 per cent of Canadians support closer trade ties and economic agreements with China.
“This visit by Carney to China is also a test. It’s very sensitive. It’s to test the Canadian public, also to test the U.S. reaction,” says Howard Lin, a professor emeritus and the founding director of the Canada-China Institute for Business and Development at Toronto Metropolitan University.
Some experts suggest that these meetings are a strategy by Carney to add pressure on Trump to come to the bargaining table and renew or negotiate an alternative to the Canada-United States-Mexico Trade Agreement (CUSMA), which is up for renegotiation this year.
Trump said earlier this week “it wouldn’t matter to me” if the current trade deal were to expire.
Here’s a look at where things stand ahead of Carney’s meetings with Chinese leaders.

Why there are tariffs between Canada and China?
Relations between the two countries have been strained for nearly a decade.
The most recent chapter of strain began in 2018, during Trump’s first term, when the RCMP arrested then-Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver at the behest of American authorities.
Canada has an extradition agreement with the U.S.
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At the time, Wanzhou was an executive at the China-based global telecommunications technology company and was wanted in the United States on international fraud charges.
About a week later, China arrested two Canadians, who became known as the two Michaels, and would later be held on widely condemned charges of espionage and held for several years in China.
“Since the two Michaels situation, there’s been trouble with trade to China. That was completely unacceptable, a diplomat was kidnapped. And so I’m not really sure what’s changed. The same people are in power, the same economic conditions with China are still around,” says Kevin Bryan, an associate professor of strategic management at the University of Toronto.
“It’s not like we’re trying to increase trade to Sweden. We’re trying to increase trade to China, where we recently had serious economic espionage and serious geopolitical issues with that country.”
Carney has vowed to double non-U.S. exports over the next decade — and China is the world’s second-largest economy.
“For Canada, this is kind of a pragmatic economic engagement, a reset. We have sectors like agriculture, which are really eager to re-enter the Chinese market,” says Lin.
“China’s objective is a little bit different. I think they would consider this visit as a strategic diplomatic win because in this political landscape, China wants to see they’re not totally isolated and considered a responsible partner that can be talked with.”
What tariffs are in place now?
In October 2024, Canada began imposing a 100 per cent tariff on all imported electric and hybrid-electric vehicles produced in China, mirroring measures taken by the U.S. amid concerns about heavy Chinese subsidies and industrial dumping.
Canada also has a 25 per cent tariff on Chinese steel and aluminum over similar concerns.
China retaliated to those moves with duties of their own. Shortly after Canada imposed those tariffs, China began investigating Canadian canola imports on similar claims of dumping.
Dumping in the context of exporting refers to when a business artificially lowers the price of its products to be significantly lower than its own domestic pricing standards.
The theory is by doing this, one nation’s industry can undermine that of another nation’s and make it difficult to compete with those products being imported.
In March 2025, China imposed a 100 per cent tariff on Canadian canola oil, canola meal and peas.
This was in addition to a 25 per cent tariff on Canadian pork and seafood products.
In August 2025, China also added a nearly 76 per cent tariff on canola seed.
China is the world’s largest importer of canola oil and canola products, with nearly all of it coming from Canada. The Canadian canola industry generates more than $43 billion per year and employs about 200,000 workers, which have been given some financial supports from the federal government in the interim.
Carney is being joined by Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe in China, as canola farmers from the Prairie province say they are hopeful for some relief to their industry.
What could come from Carney’s meetings
Canola tariffs are widely expected to be among the items on the agenda for the meetings.
But experts caution that Carney may have to offer some concessions to get any shifts from China.
Lin says it’s “almost guaranteed that China will reopen the agriculture market.”
“Western Canada is really a strong voice for a normalized relationship with China, and China will use that to argue that concession to be made from the Canadian side and then they’ll say, ‘what can we get?‘
“Maybe we just export more oil, or even clean energy. The Chinese are really focused on electric cars, steel and aluminum, but these things are very sensitive.“
Dropping tariffs on Chinese EVs or steel and aluminum could be politically challenging, given U.S. focus on those industries and the push from the administration for countries to crack down.
The United States, and Trump himself will likely be paying close attention, and Bryan says “there’s a risk” that whatever comes from these meetings may affect the future of CUSMA.
There may still be other ways for Carney to build a bridge with Beijing.
Chinese media also suggested this week that in order to mend ties between Canada and China, Canada will need to represent itself independently from the U.S.
Lin says Carney and his team need to be “cautious” at these meetings given the stakes.
“It’s kind of interesting that President Trump seems to have an American-only kind of attitude recently. He even said the trade agreement between the U.S., Canada and Mexico, ‘I don’t now if that matters’ or something. So, I think he has his own plan,” says Lin.
“I think Carney has to be cautious to say what we’ve got to say, because Canada still has a disagreement on the other front.”
Politics
European troops arrive in Greenland after ‘disagreement’ with U.S. – National TenX News
Troops from several European countries, including France, Germany, the UK, Norway and Sweden, are arriving in Greenland in a show of support for Denmark as talks between representatives of Denmark, Greenland and the U.S. on Wednesday highlighted “fundamental disagreement” between the Trump administration and European allies on the future of the Arctic island.
Denmark announced it would increase its military presence in Greenland on Wednesday and several European partners started sending symbolic numbers of troops on that day, just as the Danish and Greenlandic foreign ministers were preparing to meet with White House representatives in Washington.
The troop movements were intended to portray unity among Europeans and send a signal to U.S. President Donald Trump that an American takeover of Greenland is not necessary as NATO together can safeguard the security of the Arctic region amid rising Russian and Chinese interest.
“The first French military elements are already en route” and “others will follow,” French President Emmanuel Macron announced Wednesday, as French authorities said about 15 soldiers from the mountain infantry unit were already in Nuuk for a military exercise.
Germany will deploy a reconnaissance team of 13 personnel to Greenland on Thursday, its Defence Ministry said.
On Thursday, Danish Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen said the intention was “to establish a more permanent military presence with a larger Danish contribution,” according to Danish broadcaster DR. He said soldiers from several NATO countries will be in Greenland on a rotation system.
Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, flanked by his Greenlandic counterpart Vivian Motzfeldt, said Wednesday that a “fundamental disagreement” over Greenland remains with Trump after they held highly anticipated talks at the White House with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Rasmussen added that it remains “clear that the president has this wish of conquering over Greenland” but that dialogue with the U.S. would continue at a high level over the following weeks.
Inhabitants of Greenland and Denmark reacted with anxiety but also some relief that negotiations with the U.S. would go on and European support was becoming visible.
In Greenland’s capital, Nuuk, local residents told The Associated Press they were glad the first meeting between Greenlandic, Danish and American officials had taken place but suggested it left more questions than answers.
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Several people said they viewed Denmark’s decision to send more troops, and promises of support from other NATO allies, as protection against possible U.S. military action. But European military officials have not suggested the goal is to deter a U.S. move against the island.
Maya Martinsen, 21, agreed and said it was “comforting to know that the Nordic countries are sending reinforcements” because Greenland is a part of Denmark and NATO.
The dispute, she said, is not about “national security” but rather about “the oils and minerals that we have that are untouched.”
On Wednesday, Poulsen had announced a stepped-up military presence in the Arctic “in close cooperation with our allies,” calling it a necessity in a security environment in which “no one can predict what will happen tomorrow.”
“This means that from today and in the coming time there will be an increased military presence in and around Greenland of aircraft, ships and soldiers, including from other NATO allies,” Poulsen said.
Asked whether the European troop movements were coordinated with NATO or what role the U.S.-led military alliance might play in the exercises, NATO referred all questions to the Danish authorities. However, NATO is currently studying ways to bolster security in the Arctic.
Rasmussen, the Danish foreign minister, announced the creation of a working group with the Americans to discuss ways to work through differences.
“The group, in our view, should focus on how to address the American security concerns, while at the same time respecting the red lines of the Kingdom of Denmark,” he said.

Commenting on the outcome of the Washington meeting on Thursday, Poulsen said the working group was “better than no working group” and “a step in the right direction.” He added nevertheless that the dialogue with the U.S. did not mean “the danger has passed.”
“We are really happy that action is being taken to make sure that this discussion is not just ended with that meeting alone,” Greenlandic MP Aki-Matilda Høegh-Dam said on Thursday during a news conference in Copenhagen.
She said Greenlandic people understood they were a “pivotal point” in a broader transformation of the international rules-based order and that they felt responsible not just for themselves but also for the whole world to get it right.
Høegh-Dam said the military operations should not happen “right next to our schools and right next to our kindergartens.”
Line McGee, a 38-year-old from Copenhagen, told AP that she was glad to see some diplomatic progress. “I don’t think the threat has gone away,” she said. “But I feel slightly better than I did yesterday.”
Speaking to FOX News Channel’s Special Report on Wednesday after the White House talks, Rasmussen rejected both a military takeover and the potential purchase of the island by the U.S. Asked whether he thinks the U.S. will invade, he replied: “No, at least I do not hope so, because, I mean, that would be the end of NATO.”
Rasmussen said Greenlanders were unlikely to vote for U.S. rule even if financial incentives were offered, “because I think there’s no way that U.S. will pay for a Scandinavian welfare system in Greenland, honestly speaking.”
“You haven’t introduced a Scandinavian welfare system in your own country,” he added.
Trump, in his Oval Office meeting with reporters, said: “We’ll see how it all works out. I think something will work out.”
© 2026 The Canadian Press
Politics
A Canadian citizen has died in Iran, Ottawa says as protests intensify – National TenX News
A Canadian citizen has died in Iran, Global Affairs Canada told Global News as the protests against the Iranian regime have intensified over the last few days.
“Global Affairs Canada is aware of a Canadian citizen who died in Iran. We express our condolences to the family and loved ones during this difficult time,” a spokesperson for GAC said.
As of Wednesday, there were 3,054 Canadian citizens and permanent residents registered in Iran, the spokesperson said.
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However, they added that since registration with GAC is voluntary, the actual number may be outdated.
Canada does not have diplomatic relations with Iran.
More to come
Politics
Venezuelan opposition leader makes high-stakes visit to Washington – National TenX News
Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado will meet U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday, an encounter that has the potential to alter the future of the oil-rich South American country.
For years, Machado has been the face of Venezuela’s pro-democracy opposition. Her political coalition won Venezuela’s last election in 2024 by a landslide, according to international observers. Machado herself had been barred from running for the presidency, so opposition candidate Edmundo González ran in her stead backed by Machado’s coalition.
Despite independent analyses indicating González received about twice as many votes as President Nicolás Maduro, Maduro refused to concede. Facing arrest, both González and Machado eventually fled the country.
FILE – Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado greets supporters during a protest against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro the day before his inauguration for a third term in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix, file).
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Machado’s meeting at the White House comes less than three weeks after Maduro was seized by U.S. forces in Caracas. In her first interview following Maduro’s arrest, Machado told Fox News Hannity: “January 3rd will go down in history as the day justice defeated a tyranny. It’s a milestone…it’s not only huge for the Venezuelan people and our future; I think it’s a huge step for humanity, for freedom and human dignity.”
“I’m planning to go back to Venezuela as soon as possible,” she said.
The Colombian border city of Cúcuta. Thousands of Venezuelans cross into Colombia every day.
Kieron O’Dea / Global News
News of Machado’s impending return was quietly celebrated by ordinary Venezuelans who spoke to Global News in Cúcuta, a city on the Colombian side of the Venezuelan border where large crowds of Venezuelans arrive daily to shop for food and other basic supplies, in order to circumvent Venezuela’s extraordinarily high prices and inflation.
“Machado is our Iron Lady,” said a smiling Juan Antonio, who was in Cúcuta for a medical appointment (Colombia provides free health care to Venezuelans).
“This is the change that we’ve been waiting for for a long time. And that lady, well, what she said and what she has done and what has been left to do, gives hope to Venezuela.”

“She has the trust of the people. Every time that María Corina Machado goes out to the street, she can reunite the family of Venezuela,” said Juan Carlos Viloria, president of the NGO Global Alliance for Human Rights and a community leader in the Venezuelan diaspora.
Viloria is one of an estimated nearly three million Venezuelans living in Colombia, following a mass exodus fuelled by Venezuela’s economic collapse and Maduro’s crackdown on human rights. “This is a historic moment, but also an extremely fragile one,” Viloria said.
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That fragility is expected to underpin Machado’s meeting with the U.S. president. At around the same time Machado meets with Trump, a Venezuelan government envoy is also expected to arrive in Washington to meet U.S. officials to discuss reopening the Venezuelan embassy.
After Trump announced news of Maduro’s arrest on Jan.3, a reporter asked the U.S. president whether he would endorse Machado to lead the country. Trump’s answer surprised many.
“I think it would be very tough for her to be the leader. She doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country,” Trump said. “She’s a very nice woman, but she doesn’t have the respect.”
Instead, Trump announced his government would temporarily work with Maduro’s former vice-president, now acting Venezuelan president Delcy Rodríguez, a long-time Maduro loyalist and regime member.
FILE – Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez smiles during a press conference at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas Venezuela, Nov. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos, File).
AC
The U.S. president was angry over Machado’s decision to accept last year’s Nobel Peace Prize, an honour Trump has long coveted, which reportedly factored into Trump’s decision to dismiss Machado. Machado said last week she hoped to thank Trump personally for the U.S. intervention in Venezuela and would like to give her Nobel Prize to him. Trump called the offer “a great honour” and said “it’s very nice that she wants to come in.”
When asked if the gesture would change his view of Machado’s future role in Venezuela, the president replied, “She might be involved in some aspect of it. I will have to speak to her.”
The Nobel Committee responded with a statement that the peace prize, widely considered one of the world’s most prestigious awards, is not transferable.
December 11, 2025: Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, winner of the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize, acknowledges a crowd of people from the balcony of Grand Hotel Oslo after arriving in the Norwegian capital in the small hours of Dec. 11, 2025. The award ceremony took place the previous day, with her daughter Ana Corina Sosa Machado attending on her behalf. (Credit Image: © Kyodonews via ZUMA Press).
Kyodonews via ZUMA Press
Asked about Trump’s earlier remarks that Machado did not have sufficient support to lead the country, José Ernesto Hernández, National Coordinator for the Youth Wing of Machado’s opposition movement, told Global News he was “not in a position to question or interpret the words of Donald Trump,” but that “Venezuelans in and out of the country are united behind the leadership of María Corina Machado.”
Hernández, who, along with Machado, fled the country and is now living in an undisclosed location, said he was confident the Trump administration will ensure Venezuela holds new elections. “Today there is still repression throughout the country,” Hernández told Global News in an exclusive interview.
“(Elections) seem to be the goal of both the Venezuelans and the Trump administration itself, because that would provide stability and security for the entire hemisphere. A free and fair election, democratizing Venezuela is the safest way for the United States to be able to protect and guarantee its goal of national security.”
José Ernesto Hernández, National Coordinator for Vente Joven, poses with Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado in this undated photo.
Submitted
Article 233 of Venezuela’s constitution requires a presidential election be held within 30 days of a permanent vacancy, such as the one caused by Maduro’s removal. But Trump has repeatedly refused to set any timeline for elections in Venezuela and has suggested they could be years away, telling the New York Times that the country must first be “restored” and that an election “will require time.”
The White House has outlined a three‑phase plan for Venezuela, which puts political transition and democratic elections at the very end, after oil sector stabilization and an economic “recovery” phase. Hernández acknowledged that “it is premature to talk about if elections will be held by a certain time.”
“First, they have to take important steps for the transition to begin. And the transition begins, as it should, with recognition of the legitimate opposition leadership,” he said.
Douglas Farah, the president of IBI Consultants based in Washington, D.C., spent a decade advising the Pentagon. He told Global News that he worked with the first Trump administration in 2019 to run war games to simulate what a post-Maduro Venezuela might look like.
“I think the potential of things taking a turn for the better are very small,” Farah said. He argued the Trump administration should prioritize democratic transition and humanitarian aid over U.S. plans for oil extraction, in order to provide stability and prevent a mass exodus of refugees.
“I think it’s clear now that the main goal for the Trump administration is oil, not democracy or the restoration of decent living for the Venezuelan people. And I think that will cause us enormous grief in the near future.”
Farah said much now depends on Machado’s ability to win over President Trump.
“I think a lot will depend on if she has any U.S. backing or not,” Farah said. “If she comes in (to Venezuela) by herself, they may not arrest her because they may think that’s way too big a step for the U.S. to swallow. But she’s certainly not going to be able to mobilize politically without U.S. support.”
A Colombian soldier monitors the Venezuelan border. The Colombian government declared a state of emergency and deployed the military after U.S. forces seized Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
Kieron O’Dea / Global News
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