The neighbor in our attic is now ruled by an unelected WEF globalist

Justin Trudeau’s decade-long run as Canada’s Prime Minister ended in January 2025, a slow-motion crash sparked by his finance minister Chrystia Freeland’s dramatic December 2024 resignation. She’d clashed with Trudeau over handling Trump’s tariff threats, and her exit unleashed a Liberal Party mutiny.

Facing dismal polls—down 20 points to the Conservatives amid a housing crisis and soaring costs—Trudeau bowed out, staying on until a successor emerged. Enter Mark Carney, crowned Liberal leader on March 9, 2025, with 86% of 152,000 party votes, and sworn in as PM days later. No election, just a backroom handoff for 38 million Canadians.

Carney’s no hometown hero. Born in the Northwest Territories, sure, but he’s spent decades abroad—Goldman Sachs in London, Tokyo, New York, then Bank of Canada governor (2008–2013). His real claim to fame? Governing the Bank of England from 2013 to 2020, the first non-Brit to do so. There, he fumbled Brexit, warning of economic doom that half-materialized—sterling tanked, rates slashed to 0.25%, and his “forward guidance” flopped, earning him the “unreliable boyfriend” jab from MPs. Critics say he politicized the bank, cozying up to globalist agendas.

Speaking of globalism, Carney’s WEF credentials scream Davos elite. A regular at their powwows, he’s pushed net-zero schemes and chaired the Glasgow Financial Alliance, aligning banks with climate dogma. Posts on X call him a “WEF puppet,” installed to steer Canada into the great reset. He’s barely lived here since the 2000s, yet now leads a nation he’s long since left behind. Trudeau’s messy exit paved the way, but Carney’s ascent feels less like renewal and more like a technocrat’s takeover.

Guest Contributor

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