Yesterday, Prime Minister Mark Carney gave a historic speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Carney received a standing ovation from the audience; something that, as the moderator observed, is not common at Davs, and he deserved it. If you have a few minutes, watch the speech. I am not being hyperbolic when I use the word "historic" here. It was a speech that clearly defined the current state of the world. the place Canada has in it, and where Canada and its allies can do to cope with the chaos that we see around us and build something better.
By, contrast, Trump's speech today was at the very least an embarrassment, and in reality, a disaster. The contrast between the two men could not have been starker. If you have the stomach for it, here it is.
I'm going to quote Dean Blundell here, who describes it much better than I can and in more details than I have the stomach for.
ot strength. Not leverage. Not “strategic ambiguity.”
It was confusion, grievance, racism, lies, and visible cognitive decline, delivered in a raspy, slurred, low-energy mumble to a room that had clearly already tuned him out.
The contrast with Mark Carney — whose historic speech the day before calmly described the real world Trump has helped break — could not have been more brutal.
Carney spoke like a statesman preparing allies for reality.
Trump spoke like a man yelling at ghosts.
If we are very lucky, Trump's performance at Davos, and the contrast with Carney's, will increae the pressure on the Repubicans in Congress to finally break Trump's hold on them.
