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Home » Transcript: Trump Meets With Canada’s Mark Carney At the White House & Q&A – Oct 7, 2025

Transcript: Trump Meets With Canada’s Mark Carney At the White House & Q&A – Oct 7, 2025

Read the full transcript of President Trump’s remarks at the bilateral meeting with Canadian PM Mark Carney at the White house on October 7, 2025, and Q&A with reporters.

President Trump Welcomes Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Thank you very much, everybody. It’s an honor to have the Prime Minister of Canada, Mark Carney, who I have made very popular. He’s an extremely popular Prime Minister, and I’m very honored to do it because I liked him. Right from the beginning, I’ve liked him, and we’ve had a good relationship. We have some natural conflict, but we will probably work that out. But we’ve had a very strong relationship, and your hosting of the various countries that showed up, that was a beautiful job you did, and I appreciate it very much.

We’re going to be talking about trade, we’re going to be talking about a lot of different things. We’ll certainly be talking about Gaza. We’re in very serious negotiations to, I guess you could say, depending on the way you count, 3,000 years, you could say 500 years, you could say, but 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 even beyond the Gaza situation. We want a release of the hostages immediately, et cetera. And so our team is over there now. Another team just left, and other countries, literally every country in the world has supported the plan. I don’t think there’s anybody that hasn’t, actually, not that I’ve seen. But 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 make some deals, and we’ll do some things that are good for both of our countries. And Mark, it’s an honor to have you. Thank you very much.

Prime Minister Carney’s Response

PRIME MINISTER CARNEY: Thank you very much, Mr. President. If I may, you kindly hosted me and some of my colleagues a few months ago, and I said at the time, you are a transformative president. And since then, the transformation in the economy, unprecedented commitments of NATO partners to defense spending, peace from India, Pakistan through to Azerbaijan, Armenia, disabling Iran as a force of terror, and now, and I’m running out of time, but this is in many respects the most important. What you’ve created. The murder of Canada. No, what? That wasn’t where I was going. No, but on this solemn day of commemoration of the horrific attacks of October 7th, 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 those efforts, and we’ll do whatever we can to support it.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Thank you very much.

Questions From Reporters

REPORTER: [QUESTION INAUDIBLE]

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, we’re going to be talking about that with the Prime Minister, and we’ll be talking about tariffs. We’ll be talking about a lot of that, but that’s for a little bit later on. I want to just acknowledge our great ambassador. Is he doing a good job? He’s doing a good job. Otherwise, I’ll get him out of there.

REPORTER: [QUESTION INAUDIBLE]

PRESIDENT TRUMP: So 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.

On U.S.-Canada Trade Relations

REPORTER: Mr. President, in your opinion, why has Canada and the United States failed to reach an agreement up until now?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: 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 and 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 they want steel and we want steel, you know. So 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. And I think we’ve come a long way over the last few months, actually, in terms of that relationship.

So when it comes to trade, the United States was always giving everything. They gave everything to Canada and 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.

REPORTER: Canada has offered a lot of compromise this summer. Are you willing today to offer some compromise to Canada, maybe on steel and everything else?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, we’ve made compromise and we’ve made some compromise even on steel. But, you know, we have the same basic authority and the same basic. 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.