Carney in Australia to deepen trade and defence ties with ‘natural partner’


SYDNEY — Prime Minister Mark Carney is in Australia, where he says his government is focused on forging new partnerships in investment, defence, security, critical minerals and artificial intelligence.

“Australia is a natural partner for Canada in these areas and many, many more, areas that will deliver enormous benefits to both our peoples,” Carney said at a media availability in Sydney.

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne told reporters it was a “strategic visit at a strategic moment in history.”

Earlier in the day, he announced a co-operation agreement between Canadian and Australian pension funds.

The prime minister arrived in Sydney midday Tuesday local time, which was Monday evening in Canada. He is expected to meet with business leaders in Sydney — part of his government’s efforts to build on already strong intelligence ties through broader collaboration in trade and defence.

“This is a very important relationship for Canada to continue to build on. It is one that’s predicated on years of co-operation,” said Defence Minister David McGuinty, who is in Sydney with Carney.

He told reporters Canada is building the relationship with Australia on two tracks — a deeper economic connection and defence and security.

McGuinty said there is a “new openness here in Australia to work with Canada.”

“I would say that the prime minister’s outreach and indicating that there is another way for middle powers to come together and collaborate on the economy, on defence, on security, is a message that resonates very strongly,” he said.

While McGuinty held a media availability shortly after arriving in Sydney, Carney last held a news conference on Feb. 17, when he announced the new defence industrial strategy in Montreal.

It is unusual for prime ministers travelling abroad to not hold a news conference with accompanying journalists five days into a trip.

His silence comes as questions mount about transnational repression by India and after American strikes in Iran have set off a war involving multiple countries.

Carney’s office cancelled a Monday press conference in India following his meeting there with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. His office declined reporters’ requests to make him available to answer questions Tuesday.

On Thursday, Carney will head to Canberra to address the Australian Parliament. The prime minister will then leave for Tokyo.

Carney is set to meet with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who has been in power since 2022. Both countries are Commonwealth nations and partners in the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance, along with the U.S., U.K. and New Zealand.



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