The Hot Mic Heard Around the G7
A leaked conversation revealed something important... Canada isn’t waiting around to see what Washington does next. It’s building a backup plan.
For years, Canada’s trade strategy could be summed up in four words…
Sell it to America.
That worked when the relationship was stable.
Today, stability is no longer something governments can assume.
A hot mic moment at the G7 gave us a rare glimpse into how Prime Minister Mark Carney is handling that reality.
The conversation centered on Canada’s decision to allow a limited number of Chinese electric vehicles into the country.
Not unlimited.
Not unrestricted.
Limited.
Carney reportedly explained that Canada had capped imports at 49,000 vehicles… less than 3% of the Canadian market.
The point wasn’t the number.
The point was the strategy.
Canada isn’t opening the floodgates.
Canada is trading access for something in return.
In this case, reduced Chinese tariffs on Canadian agriculture and seafood.
That matters.
Because every container of Canadian seafood sold overseas and every agricultural shipment finding a new customer reduces our dependence on a single buyer.
And that’s the real story.
While much of the attention remains focused on Washington, Canada has quietly been expanding conversations elsewhere.
India.
The UAE.
South Korea.
Europe.
China.
Not because Canada is abandoning the United States.
Because smart countries don’t keep all their eggs in one basket.
Especially when the basket keeps getting shaken.
What stood out in the leaked exchange wasn’t hostility.
It was simplicity.
The explanation sounded less like a traditional negotiation and more like someone carefully walking another person through the details.
Some observers found that amusing.
Others found it revealing.
Either way, it suggests something important about modern diplomacy.
When leaders become unpredictable, countries stop trying to win arguments.
They start managing outcomes.
That’s a very different game.
And Canada appears to be playing it.
Another detail from the summit was equally telling.
There was reportedly no formal bilateral meeting scheduled between the Canadian and American leaders.
Think about that for a moment.
Canada’s largest trading partner.
Our closest ally.
Our neighbour.
And yet much of the meaningful conversation appears to be happening in hallways, sidelines, and informal encounters.
That isn’t how the relationship traditionally worked.
Meanwhile, Canada’s trade team keeps moving.
New agreements.
New markets.
New customers.
New options.
The goal isn’t to replace the United States.
Nobody is replacing a customer that large.
The goal is to make sure Canada never again finds itself in a position where one country can threaten our economy and expect us to fold.
That’s what diversification really means.
Not choosing new friends.
Making sure you aren’t dependent on one.
The hot mic may have exposed a private conversation.
But it also exposed something bigger.
Canada’s strategy has changed.
The country is no longer building a future around a single relationship.
It’s building a future around multiple ones.
And in an increasingly unpredictable world, that may be the smartest move on the board.
The Recap…
The G7 hot mic wasn’t really about Chinese EVs.
It revealed something much bigger.
Canada is quietly expanding trade ties around the world while reducing its vulnerability to any single partner.
The message was simple: more markets, more options, more leverage.
The Gut-Punch…
For decades, Canada’s plan was to sell most of what we produce to one customer and hope that customer stayed reasonable.
Hope is not a trade strategy.
Diversification is.
And Canada appears to have finally figured out the difference.
Source Credit:
Based on publicly reported discussions surrounding the G7 summit, Canada’s Chinese EV import cap, China-Canada tariff negotiations, and ongoing Canadian trade diversification efforts involving India, the UAE, South Korea, Europe, and other international partners.
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#CanadaStrong



Canada has REAL leadership. Real intelligence. Real stability. Real strategy. Real diplomacy. I truly applaud Canada 🇨🇦.
All the USA has is a Real ASS in the Whitehouse and Real Boot-lickers in Congress, the Senate and the Supreme Court Majority. We are a global embarrassment. I truly mourn for my country.
"OH CANADA" how I wish I were Canadian. It's true that every country has it's issues, but I challenge any other country* to claim it has more vulgarity, idiocy, insanity, emotional immaturity, and flat-out liars than this US administration.
* North Korea, Russia and Israel excluded. We all know those countries' leadership flunkies are a close second.