Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Edward Lawrence, front lawn. | ||
We're gonna get some headway here, Edward. | ||
Good morning to you. | ||
Yeah, we'll have to see. | ||
Yeah, the Canadians really would like to see some of that. | ||
You know, in fact, they've got the the flags here ready for them. | ||
Now Mark Carney, the Prime Minister of Canada, is coming with his agenda. | ||
The top of that agenda is trade. | ||
Now Canada has uh been exempt uh under USMCA for most of the goods crossing into the US, but they've experienced a lot of job losses and factories closing because of the tariff policy, especially in the auto industry. | ||
I guess he's gonna ask about tariffs because a lot of uh companies from Canada are moving into the United States, you know. | ||
Everybody's moving back into the US, and he's probably gonna be asking about tariffs. | ||
He's they're losing a lot of uh companies in Canada. | ||
Now, from the uh president's standpoint, he wants Canada to open the agriculture market to US goods and reduce the trade deficit the US has with Canada, the goods deficit was sixty-two billion dollars in twenty twenty-four. | ||
The president recently imposed twenty-five percent tariffs on imports of heavy-duty trucks. | ||
Canada sits as the number two importer of those trucks into the US, but most qualify for exemptions under USMCA, and the US liquor export has been hard hit, even though Canon Adian Prime Minister removed most of the retaliation tariffs on those items last September. | ||
Still, many Canadian stores refused to stock U.S. liquor. | ||
Exports to Canada is down eighty-five percent in the second quarter. | ||
So we'll be watching the tone of this meeting uh and how each other handles uh themselves. | ||
Now during the last visit here, uh, the Canadian Prime Minister uh he said sternly that Canada was not for sale. | ||
unidentified
|
This is Mark Carney, Harvard, Oxford, Goldman Sachs, the head of central banks and Canada's prime minister, and yet he still apologizes to every bird, just in case it's an ostrich. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Yeah, that's perfect. | ||
All right, they can go in with ours. | ||
Great. | ||
Good to see you again. | ||
Good to see you too. | ||
All right. | ||
Welcome back. | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Are we good? | ||
Just go on. | ||
That's perfect. | ||
Just keep that on you for now. | ||
Mark is absolutely correct. | ||
Mark is absolutely correct. | ||
Mark is not all about the shirt. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Keep going. | ||
I told you. | ||
Good. | ||
It would be best for us to put the tripod on the list of the best. | ||
Don't leave a lot more. | ||
2.9. | ||
Great. | ||
So are you going to the far side or are you going into the head on truck? | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Far side is this guy right here behind me. | |
I'm going to hold it. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Far side is this guy right here behind me. | ||
so the far side one should come in first okay okay far side yeah you're good just stand right there because you'll go all the way around to the like far side oh so actually flipping So you'll go in first. | ||
And you will go on the right side. | ||
So you'll you'll go right right when we go in. | ||
I know. | ||
No. | ||
There's no unilateral crew. | ||
They were not part of that. | ||
unidentified
|
So we wait. | |
Um guess white or something. | ||
Sounds like a little bit of a drawing. | ||
What happened? | ||
You know what? | ||
are you worried about your phone. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And Harry. | ||
When the president says thank you, and we're wrapping, we're all gonna be out thinking press and we're yeah, we're out. | ||
Okay. | ||
All my stuff didn't make it off. | ||
How are you trying to get that back? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm gonna trust that the movie is gonna show it back here. | ||
I'm in the lady. | ||
That will not happen. | ||
Some E3's already got it in the brack. | ||
It's probably floating in the Atlantic. | ||
No. | ||
How long are you going to take? | ||
It's really a big just in case. | ||
It's sexy bath. | ||
It's still my stuff. | ||
It's really cool. | ||
I was saying. | ||
It's quite the experience. | ||
I haven't started my students. | ||
She's so hard now. | ||
And I can't change without reading. | ||
I understand. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Well, I've got my trigger on there. | ||
I got one guy. | ||
Oh, and that's this one. | ||
yeah No, it should be. | ||
Okay. | ||
Oh, great. | ||
Okay, but here that was seriously. | ||
There was a blue bird in this. | ||
I didn't see anything. | ||
We're gonna let clear the first one. | ||
Yep. | ||
Oh wait, none of the zeroes. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Ryan, you're gonna have. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
No. | ||
See, I can tell. | ||
Just looking at you. | ||
Two and a half feet out of focus on the shape. | ||
And then we said I'll be two shots. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I won't move from that because it's a good thing. | ||
So we're supposed to move on. | ||
Okay. | ||
yeah what's the one that's weird | ||
yeah there's | ||
yeah yeah | ||
yeah yeah | ||
yeah | ||
yeah Well, thank you very much, everybody. | ||
It's an honor to have the Prime Minister of Canada, Mark Carney, who I I have made very popular. | ||
He's an extremely popular Prime Minister. | ||
And I'm very honored to do it because I like to afraid from the beginning I've liked him, and we've had a good relationship. | ||
We have some natural conflict, but we uh we'll probably work that out. | ||
But we've had a very strong relationship, and uh your hosting of the various countries that showed up were were that was a beautiful job you did, and I appreciate it very much. | ||
Uh we're gonna be talking about trade, we're gonna be talking about a lot of different things. | ||
We'll certainly be talking about Gaza. | ||
We're in uh very serious negotiations to uh I guess you could say, depending on the way you count, three thousand years, you could say five hundred years, you could say, but that it's been raging for a long time. | ||
And I think there's a possibility that we could have peace in the Middle East. | ||
It's something uh even beyond the Gaza situation. | ||
We want a release of the hostages immediately, etc. | ||
And so our team is over there now. | ||
Uh another team just left, and uh other countries, literally every country in the world has supported the plan. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Uh I don't think there's anybody uh that hasn't, actually. | ||
Not that I've seen. | ||
But uh there's a real chance that we could do something, so you may have some questions on that later. | ||
But in the meantime, we'll spend some time and we'll uh make some deals and we'll do some things that are good for both of our countries and markets an honor to have you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you very much, Mr. President. | ||
If I may, uh you kindly hosted uh me and some of my colleagues a few months ago, and I said at the time uh you were a transformative president. | ||
And since then, uh the transformation in the economy, uh unprecedented commitments of NATO partners uh to defense spending, peace from India Pakistan through to Azerbaijan, Armenia, uh disabling Iran as a force of terror. | ||
Uh and now, and I'm running out of time, but this is uh many respects the most important. | ||
Uh created of Canada. | ||
That wasn't where I was going. | ||
I was no, but uh you know, on this uh on this uh solemn day of uh commemoration of the October horrific attacks of October 7th. | ||
Uh For the first time in decades, hundreds of years, thousands of years, this prospect of peace that you've made possible. | ||
Canada stands four square behind uh those efforts, and we'll do whatever we can to support. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
Any questions? | ||
unidentified
|
Is there any uh what would it take for you to draw or lower your tariffs on Canadian sectors including, including a luminance? | |
Well, we're gonna be talking about that with the prime minister. | ||
We'll be talking about tariffs, we'll be talking about a lot of that, but uh that's for a little bit later on. | ||
I want to just acknowledge our great uh ambassador. | ||
Is he doing a good job? | ||
He's doing a good job. | ||
Otherwise, I'll get him out of there so fast. | ||
unidentified
|
No, you have a good idea. | |
President Trump: Mr. President, please Is it the White House's position that furlough workers should be paid for their fat pay? | ||
Uh I would say it depends on who we're talking about. | ||
I can tell you this, the Democrats have put a lot of people in great risk and jeopardy, but it really depends on who you're talking about. | ||
But for the most part, we're going to take care of our people. | ||
There are some people that really don't deserve to be taken care of, and we'll take care of them in a different way. | ||
Okay, thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. President, in your opinion, why has Canada and the United States failed to reach an agreement up until now? | |
Well, it's a complicated agreement, more complicated maybe than any other agreement we have on trade, because you know, we have natural conflict. | ||
We also have mutual love. | ||
You know, we have great love for each other. | ||
I love this, I love Canada, the people of Canada, and Mark feels the same way about here. | ||
The problem we have is that they want a car company and I want a car company, meaning the U.S. wants a car company, and uh they want uh steel and we want steel. | ||
You know, so uh in other countries they're very far away. | ||
And there's no problem. | ||
You can compete and you can do we don't like to compete because we sort of hurt each other when we compete. | ||
And so we have a natural conflict. | ||
It's a natural business conflict, nothing wrong with it. | ||
Uh and I think we've come a long way over the last few months, actually, in terms of uh that relationship. | ||
So uh when it comes to trade, the United States was always giving everything. | ||
They would they gave everything to Canada. | ||
They would they would you know let car companies leave here and go to Canada? | ||
But that hurts the United States, and you know, other presidents didn't see that, they weren't business oriented, they might have been good politicians in some cases, not in all cases, they were bad at both. | ||
But it's a very natural conflict, and it's something that we're working on. | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. President, The NFL has offered a lot of compromise this summer. | |
Are you willing today to offer some compromise to Canada, maybe on steel and anything else? | ||
Well, we've made compromise, and we uh we've made some compromise even on steel, but you know, we have the same basic uh authority and the same uh basic uh this could be also a little bit of a conflict with other countries all over the world on steel because we want to make our own steel, we don't want to bring steel in for the most part, but we will bring it in, and we do bring it in. | ||
We continue to bring it in from Canada, but there is a tariff to pay. | ||
And I think that would be a normal thing to say, but we we've come a long way. | ||
I think Howard, we can truly say, Do you want to make a comment on that? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I think the opportunity to work together, as you said, there's conflict. | |
No, why do we make cars in Canada? | ||
You've called that out, and you've addressed that. | ||
unidentified
|
So there are places we should work together, and there are places that we have natural comfort. | |
It's a tough situation because we want to make our cars here. | ||
At the same time, we want Canada to do well making cars. | ||
So uh we're working on formulas, and I think we'll get there. | ||
unidentified
|
Canadians are refusing to go to the U.S. The numbers are down like 23% uh in the first seven months of the year. | |
What do you say to Canadians that don't want to go to the U.S. now because of your 50% state talk because of the trade war, the tariffs and fear of the case. | ||
I understand that. | ||
Look, I understand that. | ||
And Americans don't want to buy cars that are made in Canada, you know. | ||
I mean, we have the same conflict. | ||
So there isn't it's it's something that uh will get worked out. | ||
There's still great love between the two countries, but uh you know, American people want product here, they want to make it here. | ||
Uh Detroit was emptied out and moved to Canada, moved to Mexico, moved to other places, not just Canada. | ||
And uh now they're all moving back, you know, they're moving back. | ||
We have right now, he's just telling Mark, we have 17 trillion, but it's gonna be it's really much higher. | ||
That was as of a couple of months ago. | ||
We have uh over 17 trillion dollars being invested now in the United States. | ||
As an example, Biden in he was the worst president we've ever had, but they had less than one trillion in four years. | ||
We have more than 17 trillion in eight months, eight months, and I think that number is gonna be 21, 22 trillion dollars. | ||
Uh there's never been anything like that in the history of the world for any country, not even close. | ||
You know, if you did one trillion in a year, that's pretty good. | ||
We're gonna do over 20. | ||
And it's coming in with AI, it's coming in with auto plants. | ||
You know, we're building auto plants, a lot of auto plants in the U.S. It's coming in for a lot of reasons. | ||
It's coming in because of the fact, I think the November 5th election was a big factor, and I think the tariffs are a big factor. | ||
And uh again, we want Canada to do great, but you know, there's a point at which we also want the same business. | ||
We're competing for the same business. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
That's why I keep mentioning one way to solve that problem is a very easy way. | ||
But we're competing for the same business. | ||
He wants to make cars, we want to make cars, and we're in competition. | ||
And the advantage we have is we have this massive market. | ||
So it's a, you know, it's quite an advantage. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Mr. President, can we talk about Portland for a second? | ||
Are you planning to invoke the insurrection act? | ||
And that would be uh you know, a very uh long standing war of law that's been on the books. | ||
Yeah, well, it's been invoked before, as you know. | ||
Uh if you look at Chicago, Chicago's a great city where there's a lot of crime. | ||
And if the governor can't do the job, we'll do the job. | ||
It's all very simple. | ||
Uh they lose they probably had 50 murders in Chicago over the last uh five, six, seven months. | ||
Many people were shot. | ||
And then the governor gets up and he says, Well, we can handle it. | ||
They can't handle it, they don't know what they're doing. | ||
The mayor is grossly incompetent. | ||
He's at a four percent approval rating in Chicago. | ||
He's at a four percent lowest approval rating, lower than even de Blasio had, which is hard to believe in New York. | ||
I thought de Blasio would always maintain that record, but the Chicago guy is even lower. | ||
So I think that uh we want safe cities. | ||
If you look at DC, you would right now, Mark, you could go out, take your family out to dinner, you could walk right down the middle of the street. | ||
There is no crime in DC. | ||
Uh when I got here, this place was a raging hellhole. | ||
Where people would come from Canada, people would come from other places and end up getting shot. | ||
Nobody's being shot. | ||
The uh the National Guard's been unbelievable. | ||
I mean, they are strong, tough guys. | ||
You know, we won something at the Supreme Court, which is a big deal. | ||
Merit. | ||
Everything now in this country is merit-based. | ||
I didn't think I'd ever see it again. | ||
And we have our soldiers in merit based too, and they're central casting, and they walk through that town, and I'll tell you what, this place is safe. | ||
It's beautiful. | ||
Now we're in Memphis, and the same thing's happening. | ||
You're getting the reports. | ||
The the bad guys are saying we don't want anything to do with this. | ||
And we're removing many people in uh DC, we we took out 17 1,700 career criminals and sent them back to the countries from which they came, mostly led out by Biden and his people that had open border and open border policy. | ||
And you know, Canada, you suffered because of that too, because they'd come here and they'd go into Canada also. | ||
So we're like a buffer for that in terms of they it's Canada suffered greatly by Biden and the open border, the policy of open border, totally unchecked, totally unvetted. | ||
And these people were, you know, if you got five percent, two percent, now you were getting a lot of bad people. | ||
And uh we now have a closed border. | ||
You've done well. | ||
We have a closed border, and it's a really closed border. | ||
In fact, for four months, I don't even know if this is possible, but they this is the the figures were released. | ||
Zero people were able to come into the United States from the southern border. | ||
Zero. | ||
And as you know, we've we've taken a very hard stand on drugs. | ||
This is also benefiting you. | ||
Uh we've uh a lot of the we call them the water drugs, the drugs that come in through water, uh, they're not coming. | ||
There are no boats anymore. | ||
They're frankly, there are no fishing boats. | ||
There's no boats out there, period. | ||
If you want to know the truth, we're saying, does anybody go fishing anymore? | ||
The fact is we knocked out, uh, probably saved at least a hundred thousand lives, American lives, Canadian lives, by uh taking out all those boats coming in. | ||
So it's uh, and now they don't come in that way anymore. | ||
Now they'll come in other ways, and we're not gonna allow that either. | ||
So we've done we've done a great job on that. | ||
Uh but uh on crime, Chicago's a great city, but you can't be a great city if you have murders and if you have a lot of problems, and they do, and they have an incompetent policy, just like they had open border policy, anybody could come in. | ||
They came in from prisons, they came in from mental institutions, drug dealers, they came in from all over the place, and we don't have that anymore. | ||
This country is becoming very we're a very strong country. | ||
Look, financially speaking, I would say that uh because of the tariffs, because of the election, because of the policy, because of the great big beautiful deal. | ||
It's what I added the word great because I was it really is it's the biggest, it's the biggest bill ever passed in the history of our country. | ||
We don't need another bill. | ||
It's the biggest tax cuts, uh, the biggest, I mean, when you think no tax on tips, no tax on social security, no tax on overtime for the people. | ||
But far beyond that, what it does is incentivizes auto plants and AI and all of the things that nobody's ever passed a bill like it. | ||
We don't need another bill, we don't need any more bills. | ||
I said, let's get it all at once. | ||
I was greatly helped by our speaker, Mike Johnson, and by uh the Senate. | ||
I'll tell you what, John Thune's been both of those guys have been incredible. | ||
And we got a bill passed that we really I said, let's see if we can get it all done, because these democrats are like insurrectionists, okay? | ||
They're so bad for our country, so their policy is so bad for our country. | ||
I said, let's see if we can get it all done in the big and everybody said it's not doable. | ||
Because it's the biggest bill ever passed in the history of our country, and we got it all done. | ||
We don't need anything else. | ||
We got everything we want, and now because of that, uh, that's a big reason why the companies are coming in. | ||
You know, one year depreciation, one year write-off, one year expensing. | ||
Nobody's ever seen anything like it. | ||
So they're so they're coming in from all over the world. | ||
But uh to have a great country, you can't have crime. | ||
And we don't have crime, but we have cities where there's tremendous crime, and Chicago's one of them. | ||
And if the governor can't straighten it out, we'll straighten it out. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
A question, a question, a question for the president. | ||
unidentified
|
I'd like to know how come the UK and the European Union succeeded to sign deals and bring the tax down, and Canada still hasn't been able to do the same. | |
Yeah, because they're not located right next to each other. | ||
It you know, it makes it uh in many cases it's much better and easier. | ||
But yeah, if I if I may. | ||
Let's uh let's be clear about the relationship as it stands right now. | ||
We are the second largest trading partner of the United States. | ||
We do a lot of trade going across the border where we're cooperating, first thing. | ||
Secondly, we are the largest foreign investor in the United States. | ||
Half a trillion dollars in the last five years alone, probably eight trillion dollars in the next five years if we get uh the agreement that we expect to get. | ||
Thirdly, there are areas, as the president just said, where we I wouldn't conflict, maybe not so much conflict. | ||
unidentified
|
We compete. | |
There are areas where we compete, and it's in those areas where we have to come to uh an agreement that works. | ||
But there are more areas where we are stronger together, and that's what we're focused on. | ||
And we're gonna get the right deal. | ||
Right deal for America, right deal, obviously, from my perspective, for Canada. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a good thing. | |
Including one thing that you're gonna do. | ||
Easy wait, wait, wait. | ||
So one thing where we are working very closely is the Golden Dome. | ||
That's the protective mechanism, and you see How that works. | ||
It's unbelievable. | ||
The uh, you know, Ronald Reagan wanted to have it, and at that time they didn't have the technology, even close to the technology, but he was he was advanced uh and we'll be working together on a golden dome for the two countries, and uh it's something that I think is going to be very important, especially when you look at the world, you look at what's happening. | ||
We want to have we want to have that protection. | ||
It's really amazing. | ||
The technology is unbelievable. | ||
unidentified
|
Why do you say some federal workers should not get their back pay? | |
Why do you say some? | ||
Well, you're gonna have to figure that out, okay. | ||
Ask ask the Democrats that question. | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. President, just a follow-up there. | |
I mean, the law says that when the government is pre-opens that workers will receive their their back pays. | ||
Are you going to find the law there? | ||
Or what do you have to do? | ||
I follow the law, and I what the law says is correct, and I follow the law. | ||
unidentified
|
I always president. | |
Mr. President, will Canada be leaving empty-handed, or will Canada be leaving? | ||
Will Mr. Carnegie leaving Washington with a deal on terror? | ||
I think they're going to be very happy. | ||
We have a lot of things that we're working on that uh people don't talk about. | ||
They talk about uh, you know, competitiveness. | ||
He's a very competitive person. | ||
And uh they talk about things that we don't necessarily agree on, but I think they're gonna walk away very happy. | ||
I think so. | ||
unidentified
|
On all the trade deals that you signed, there's been a minimum tariff that countries have got. | |
When USMCA gets renegotiated, do you want a minimum tariff on goods between Canada and the US? | ||
Well, we're gonna have tariffs between Canada, and you know, they have them with us. | ||
Uh I will say with our farmers, as you know, they they went up to as much as 400 percent, 250, 300, and even one at 401, we found one having to do with a very small product, but it was it was high. | ||
So we've had so you know we've always had tariffs between the two of us, and actually uh Canada was charging us very high tariffs on our agricultural things, a lot of our agricultural product, and that's one of the things that we talk about for bringing that down. | ||
So, you know, this is a mutual thing, but uh we've been charged uh tariffs. | ||
Look, we're the king of being screwed by tariffs, just so you understand. | ||
And I'm not talking about with Canada, I'm talking about with countries all over the world. | ||
When you look at Europe, when you look at China, when you look at uh all of the uh uh any almost every country charged the U.S., we didn't charge them because we were led by stupid people in many cases, stupid people, they took advantage of our country. | ||
They're not taking advantage of us anymore. | ||
You know, if you looked at European Union, they're all my friends. | ||
I don't blame them, I blame our presidents. | ||
I blame our past presidents and you know, business leaders. | ||
But uh we are the the uh king of countries that have been taken advantage of for many, many years. | ||
We've been paying trillions and trillions of dollars and receiving nothing, nothing at all. | ||
As an example, prior to the deal with Europe, where they pay a lot of money, but they're happy, and I'm happy the deal was good. | ||
It's a fair deal, but it wasn't fair. | ||
Uh you couldn't put a car into Europe, you couldn't sell your agriculture into Europe, you couldn't do anything. | ||
And now we have it so that it's open. | ||
Uh we charge them tariffs. | ||
We didn't charge them tariffs a car, they charge us tremendous. | ||
I said to Angela Merkel once, I said, How many cars have gone to Germany from the United States? | ||
And she said, Well, I don't believe any. | ||
And I said, You're right, you're right. | ||
Well, that doesn't happen anymore. | ||
And they're paying a fair amount. | ||
It's just a fair amount. | ||
It's not, I could ask for much more. | ||
It's a fair amount. | ||
But the United States now is using the same thing that they've used on us. | ||
And I just can't believe it's taken presidents so long to do this. | ||
And again, we're gonna treat people fairly, we're gonna especially treat Canada fairly, but I can't believe it's taken so long where we get charged and don't charge them. | ||
Japan was a good example. | ||
We made a deal with Japan, you saw that mark, a deal with Japan. | ||
It's a much different deal that we've had in the past. | ||
But they would send us millions of cars, no charge. | ||
We weren't allowed to send them cars. | ||
We sent the no cars. | ||
I I doubt you had one car go into Japan because we were restricted, they didn't want our cars. | ||
Uh same Thing with Europe, same thing with other places. | ||
So now all we all we do now is fairness. | ||
But fairness leads us to the most successful country there's ever been. | ||
You know, we have some advantages over other countries, and we do have a great market. | ||
We have an amazing market. | ||
But you know what? | ||
If I let this go, if if we didn't win this election, if we had these people that were running that were ruining our country, destroying our country with their open borders and men playing in women's sports and transgender from everybody and windmills all over the place. | ||
If we allowed that to go on for another couple of years, we would be I'm not sure that we'd even have a country. | ||
unidentified
|
The Press: Yeah, Brian. | |
By the way, I'm not sure we would have even had a country. | ||
And now we have the most successful country in the world. | ||
Brian? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, sir. | |
What is your message to Democrats ahead of a next vote to open up the government? | ||
The American people are saying open the damn government. | ||
What's your message to them right now? | ||
Well, they're the ones that started it, they're the ones that have it, and it's almost like uh a kamikaze attack by them. | ||
You want to know the truth? | ||
This is like a kamikaze attack. | ||
They almost, you know, they have nothing to lose. | ||
They've lost the elections, they've lost the presidential election in a landslide. | ||
I saw the other day where Kamala said this was a very close election. | ||
Very this was one of the biggest sweeps that anybody's ever had. | ||
Won the popular vote by millions, won the uh electoral college by a massive amount. | ||
They said if I got 270, that would be great. | ||
But I got I think 312 or 315, and they got 220. | ||
So, you know, we won that. | ||
But we won counties. | ||
The big thing is counties. | ||
So out of all of the counties, thousands and thousands, we got 2,500, they got 525. | ||
It was a landslide, and we listened. | ||
Oh, yes, it was close. | ||
It was one of the greatest victories ever. | ||
And it was a mandate to do what we're doing. | ||
And uh I hope, and and Mark wants this as much as I do. | ||
Uh we are very close to making a deal on the Middle East that will bring peace to the Middle East after all of these years of uh millions and millions, tens of millions of people being killed. | ||
There's a chance to bring peace to the Middle East. | ||
In addition to that, I made seven other deals, and they were you know, great. | ||
And we're uh, you know, things are happening with respect to Russia, Ukraine. | ||
That's one that uh last week, Mark, uh 7,812 people were killed. | ||
Soldiers, mostly soldiers. | ||
But 7,000 more than 7,000, almost 8,000 soldiers were killed. | ||
It's a crazy, it's a crazy thing. | ||
I thought that would have been one of the easy ones. | ||
I get along very well with Putin, and I thought that would have been a very disappointed in him because I thought this would have been an easy one to settle, but uh it's turned out to be maybe tougher than the Middle East. | ||
We'll see what happens with the Middle East. | ||
unidentified
|
The Middle East… Go ahead. | |
Behind is the fentanyl crisis over with Canada with the Canadian border is what the fentanyl crisis no, it's not over. | ||
It's never, I think it's never gonna be over, frankly. | ||
But they've done Canada's worked hard and they've done a much better job than in the past. | ||
Uh we have uh very few people coming in through our southern border, too. | ||
We've worked with Canada and we've worked with Mexico, so we've made it a lot better. | ||
I just on fentanyl, any amount is too much. | ||
So we've gotten it down, it's down substantially, it's less than one percent, but it's look, it's still too much, it's too much at home in Canada. | ||
Yeah, we got to stamp it up. | ||
unidentified
|
US MCA, are the two of you both committed to seeing it through in the renegotiation of that deal that you made? | |
Well, we can renegotiate it and that would be good, or we could just do different deals. | ||
We're allowed to do different deals if we were. | ||
We might make deals that are better for the individual countries. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I want to make whatever the best deal is for this country, and also very much with Canada in mind. | ||
Yeah, go ahead, please. | ||
Go ahead, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Sir, uh on China, uh, what work can the United States and Canada do together uh to counter China? | |
Well, you have to be able to compete. | ||
They're a great competitor. | ||
And Mark and I both know that. | ||
And you have to be able to compete. | ||
We have big advantages over China for lots of different reasons. | ||
And I think we're doing very well with China. | ||
I get along very well with President Xi. | ||
I'm gonna be meeting him in a few weeks, as you know. | ||
Uh I'll be meeting him in South Korea. | ||
But uh, we've had a very good relationship for a long time. | ||
But you have to be able to compete to do well with China. | ||
If you can't compete, you're not gonna do well with China. | ||
And Canada's very competitive. | ||
I can tell you that. | ||
Canada's a very competitive country. | ||
And I think Canada's done very well over the years with China. | ||
Yeah, yeah, we have. | ||
But we'll do better together. | ||
Yeah on that. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm rolling to the Middle East. | |
Um, what guarantees are you giving your Arab partners that Israel will not resume its offensive after the hostages are released? | ||
Well, the primary guarantee is once this deal happens, if it does happen, look, they're in negotiations right now. | ||
We are going to do everything possible. | ||
We have a lot of power, and we're going to do everything possible to make sure everybody adheres to the deal. | ||
Okay? | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. Are you concerned about the delays at the airports and how do you see the shutdown of the deal? | |
Oh, sure. | ||
I mean, it's uh they're all Democrat delays. | ||
There are delays at the airport. | ||
That's standard. | ||
And again, this is something that we've every day we put forth a bill. | ||
It's just a continuation. | ||
It's a very simple thing to sign and very simple to do. | ||
And I I really think that these are people that I think they have nothing to lose. | ||
They have a party that's out of control, they have no leader, nobody knows who the leader is. | ||
I look at people with very low IQs like a crockett, this woman Crockett. | ||
I never met her. | ||
But she's a low IQ individual. | ||
Uh I look at AOC talking about how if they want to negotiate, they can come to my office. | ||
She's not in that position to do that. | ||
And who the hell is she to say that? | ||
And then I watch Nancy Pelosi not knowing what to do. | ||
I watch, I watch their leadership. | ||
Look, Schumer is petrified of uh primary, because he's not going to win, probably against anybody in a primary. | ||
You know, Schumer did the right thing, uh, but he handled it badly originally a year ago. | ||
He did probably the right thing, but he handled it badly. | ||
I I think Schumer is incapable of making a deal. | ||
They are a mess. | ||
They're a party that has no leadership. | ||
They have uh and they have no policy. | ||
You know, we have great, we have great, I think we have great leadership, but we also have great policy. | ||
We have strong borders, we have no men and women's sports. | ||
We I mean basic things, we're not uh they're not we're not gonna take your child away and change the sex of your child. | ||
We're not gonna do things like that. | ||
What they're doing to the country is so incredible. | ||
And they got away with it with all their woke crap, and now it's stopped. | ||
And we have a country that's based on common sense and strength and uh intelligence. | ||
I mean, we have the United States of America, and I say it, I say it all the time. | ||
Other leaders have told me this. | ||
Mark hasn't yet, but I think he would. | ||
A year ago we were a dead country, and now we we are the hottest country anywhere in the world. | ||
Maybe Canada, I'll give Canada. | ||
But I like because I do like Canada. | ||
But you know, we're the hottest country in the world right now. | ||
There's never been a country that has the kind of money coming into there's never been anything like this. | ||
There has never been a country that if if you get if you take a trillion dollars, that would be unbelievable. | ||
We're gonna have over 20 trillion dollars invested in this country. | ||
There's never been anything like what you're seeing, and it's based on good policy and common sense and leadership. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
What is that? | |
Mr. President, what is Canada giving you in return? | ||
Do you think Mr. Carney's gonna be leaving Washington happy? | ||
What's Canada giving you in return? | ||
Well, you'll find out, but I think uh the people of Canada they will love us again. | ||
Most of them still do. | ||
If you say only 25% I assume a lot of them, I think they love us. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Um I'm not I'm not the biggest hockey fan, but I like it a lot. | ||
And I watched some of the greatest hockey games I've ever held with those games, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, very good. | |
We're coming down for the World Series, Mr. President. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, good. | |
By the way, Mr. President, well, you find a trade deal with Canada that doesn't include uh supply management goods like dairy, for example? | ||
Uh the federal government's well, a deal would include dairy. | ||
I mean, it's gonna include everything. | ||
We'll we'll do a comprehensive. | ||
unidentified
|
Have you identified programs to eliminate under this shutdown? | |
Oh, sure. | ||
Sure. | ||
Which one? | ||
We have a lot. | ||
I'm not gonna tell you, but we'll be announcing it pretty soon. | ||
But we have a lot of things that we're gonna eliminate and permanently eliminate. | ||
You know, one of the things that we have is some advantage, you could say, but because of the shutdown, which I think they made a big mistake, we're able to take out billions and billions of dollars of waste, fraud, and abuse. | ||
And they've handed it, you know, to on a silver platter. | ||
And you know, Russell Vote is a serious person, very serious person, and he's sitting there and he's getting ready to cut things. | ||
And this is something that was handed to us by I assume Schumer. | ||
I don't, I just don't know if Schumer has any power anymore. | ||
I look at your your leadership, I don't know who to speak to. | ||
I'll tell you what, I'm getting calls from Democrats wanting to meet. | ||
I never even heard their names before, and they're claiming to be leader. | ||
The Democrats have no leader. | ||
They remind me of Somalia, okay? | ||
You know, and I met the president of Somalia, told him about the problem he's got. | ||
I said, You have somebody from Somalia who's telling us how to run our country. | ||
From Somalia, he said, Would you like to take her back? | ||
He said, No, I don't want her. | ||
Okay, you know who I'm talking about. | ||
Say it again. | ||
How many permanent jobs are you talking about? | ||
Well, I don't I can tell you, I'll be able to tell you that in four or five days if this keeps going on. | ||
If this keeps going on, it'll be substantial. | ||
And a lot of those jobs will never come back. | ||
But you're going to have a lot closer to a balanced budget, actually. | ||
unidentified
|
It's 100%! | |
Is there anything the prime minister has done that's making it more difficult to reach a deal? | ||
Say it. | ||
unidentified
|
Is there anything that the Prime Minister has done that's making it more difficult or easier to reach a deal? | |
No, these I think he's a great prime minister. | ||
I mean, he could represent me anytime. | ||
I will tell you, you know, I'm not saying that because no, he he is a very strong, very good leader. | ||
He's a he's a nice man, but he can be nasty. | ||
He could be very nasty, maybe as nasty as anybody. | ||
How uh I think I think Canada is let me put it this way. | ||
I can tell you this, because I deal with lots of leaders all over the world. | ||
Uh he is uh he is a world class leader. | ||
He's a man that knows what he wants, and uh I'm not surprised to see that he won the election and won it substantially, and I'm I would think he's more popular now. | ||
He's a good man, he does a great job, but he's a tough negotiator. | ||
unidentified
|
So the one so then what's holding things up? | |
If he's a great man and you want to do a deal with Canada, why aren't you? | ||
Because I want to be a great man too. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
That could have been that one. | |
That could have been going. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
Thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Hard to finish on a better note there. | |
Thank you. | ||
That was a this is Mark Carney. | ||
Harvard, Oxford, Goldman Sachs, the head of central banks and Canada's prime minister. | ||
And yet he still apologizes to every bird, just in case it's an ostrich. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
So when the truth gone pee, faith and freedom on your TV screen, stand up strong, battle through the night. | ||
The penny souls here bringing liberty to light. | ||
From the speeches to the dates, Benny's sharp like a blade, cover through the lots. | ||
What's the truth cascade with the booby is hot? | ||
This man never fades. | ||
You know it's prompt how when Betty invades from saving the nation to stories untold. | ||
The penny sows of storm, see the truth unfold. | ||
Stay in the loop, let freedom take hold, saltin' all the libs, soul never sold. | ||
It's the Benny show where the truth gon' be. | ||
Faith and freedom on your TV screen. | ||
Stand up strong, battle through the night. | ||
The Benny shows here, bringin' liberty the light. | ||
Liberty delight. | ||
Bringin' liberty the light. | ||
Liberty delight. | ||
Bringin' liberty the light. | ||
From the speeches to the baits. | ||
Benny sharp like a blade. | ||
Coming through the lives, watch the truth cascade with the warrior's heart. | ||
This man never fades. | ||
You know it's prime time when Benny invades. | ||
From saving the nation to stories untold. | ||
The Benny shows a storm, see the truth unfold. | ||
Stay in the loop, let freedom take hold. | ||
Saltin' all the libs, soul never sold. | ||
It's the Benny show where the truth gon' be. | ||
Faith and freedom on your TV screen. | ||
Stand up strong, battle through the night. | ||
The Benny shows here, bringin' liberty the light. | ||
Bringin' liberty the light. |