Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S President Donald Trump pointed and smiled at each other as they sat down for dinner together in South Korea on Oct. 29, marking their first interaction in person since Trump called off all trade negotiations with Canada last week.
The two leaders sat across from each other among a small group of leaders who were invited to a dinner hosted by South Korean President Lee Jae-Myung, ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit set to begin on Oct. 31. Signs on the dinner tables indicated the dinner was in honour of Trump “and state leaders.”
When asked by reporters if he had a message for Trump as he arrived at the dinner, Carney said, “I have a message for this president,” while pointing at Lee. “I’m very happy to be here,” he said.
When asked by reporters how dinner was and whether he chatted with Trump, Carney said it was “very good” and that they had “a very good conversation.”
Carney and Trump hadn’t seen each other or spoken since Trump cancelled trade talks, despite both leaders being in Asia for several days, including at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit in Malaysia earlier in the week.
The United States and South Korea advanced trade talks on Oct. 29, including plans for a $350 billion investment in the American economy. The two countries have agreed to set tariffs on U.S. imports of Korean automobiles and auto parts at 15 percent, down from the current 25 percent, to put them on par with their Japanese competitors. Lee also awarded Trump with South Korea’s highest civilian honour, the “Grand Order of Mugunghwa.”
Anti-Tariff Ad Controversy
Trump said on Oct. 23 he was terminating all trade negotiations with Canada over Ontario’s $75 million ad campaign, which uses portions of a 1987 address from late President Ronald Reagan praising free trade, including with Canada. Trump said the ad misrepresented Reagan’s address and was meant to interfere with an upcoming U.S. Supreme Court hearing into his administration’s use of tariffs.Following discussions with Carney, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said on Oct. 24 he would pull the ads on Oct. 27, after Americans see the ads during the World Series baseball games over the weekend.
Trade Talks
Prior to the anti-tariff ad controversy, momentum had appeared to be building in trade talks between Canada and the United States following Carney’s visit to the White House on Oct. 7. Carney said “detailed, constructive negotiations” had taken place with the Trump administration around the sectors of steel, aluminum, and energy.“We’re not resting because the return on building at home is far greater than the hit from trade turbulence with the United States. And the opportunities internationally are considerable,” Carney told reporters in Malaysia on Oct. 27.







