Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney courts investment at World Economic Forum in Switzerland

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2026 11:39 AM
  • Carney courts investment at World Economic Forum in Switzerland

Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Switzerland on Monday to join the global power elite for the World Economic Forum in the ski resort town of Davos, where he's looking to drum up investment from other countries and corporations.

The forum puts Carney together with the movers and shakers he encountered during his past work as a central banker and United Nations envoy. The Conservatives have pledged to boycott the event entirely, saying the attendees are out of touch with the needs of Canadians.

"It is a clearly a significant meeting of what you might call globally influential elite, coming from a variety of backgrounds (and) those representing capital around the world," said University of British Columbia political scientist Stewart Prest.

"There can be a celebrity element as well, and leading policy-makers from around the world are present."

This summit is happening "at a moment of populist frustration with politics," Prest said, adding Carney's attendance risks courting voter backlash against "what seems like a cushy gig."

But U.S. President Donald Trump's global trade war and threats against national sovereignty make attending Davos less politically risky for Carney right now, Prest added.

"There is still suspicion of that kind of global wealth and power, but there is also a recognition that these are difficult times, and that Canada needs to find allies wherever it can," he said.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has railed against "globalist Davos elites" and has pledged to ban any cabinet led by him from attending the WEF, an organization that has been the subject of numerous conspiracy theories.

Prest noted that former Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper attended Davos in 2010 and 2012, when the country was recovering from the global recession and still played "a muscular role in the world" through its resilient banking sector and its contribution to the NATO mission in Afghanistan. Poilievre was an MP in Harper's caucus at the time.

"Canada then, as now, had something to say that other countries would be interested in hearing, and Mr. Harper — as any good politician would — took advantage of that," he said.

"Poilievre was essentially part of a government that took active part in these kinds of discussions, for the same reasons that we see Mr. Carney doing so."

Former prime minister Justin Trudeau also attended Davos in 2016 and 2018, though Prest said he did not have the same gravitas that Carney brings to the summit.

"(Carney) is somebody who doesn't really have to justify his presence in a conversation like this, because he … very clearly understands macroeconomics in a granular way. And so that means it's a different proposition for him to go to a place like Davos," he said.

"He is speaking the language of those who are there, and they are going to be interested in what he has to say — not only as a representative of Canada, but actually as someone with considerable expertise and background in the issues that are going to be discussed."

Carney is set to give speeches Tuesday and Wednesday aimed at luring investment to Canada before returning to Ottawa.

He is set to leave Switzerland on Wednesday and might depart before Trump is set to speak at Davos, at 9:30 a.m. Ottawa time.

Trump's unpredictability could upend the entire gathering, Prest said.

"The United States looks to be actively trading away its status as a global hegemon with interests and influence around the world for a kind of Western hemispheric bully. That is a remarkable retrenchment. It is a step back," he said.

"The world, in a realist lens, is a matter of finding ways to defend your own sovereignty, and support the prosperity of your country, by whatever means necessary."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Vast majority of victims don't report intimate partner violence to police, study says

Vast majority of victims don't report intimate partner violence to police, study says
A new analysis by Quebec's statistics institute has concluded that the vast majority of victims don't report intimate partner violence to the police.

Vast majority of victims don't report intimate partner violence to police, study says

CRA aiming to hire 1,700 call centre staff ahead of busy tax season

CRA aiming to hire 1,700 call centre staff ahead of busy tax season
The Canada Revenue Agency is looking to hire or rehire about 1,700 call centre workers over the next few months to manage an influx of calls during the upcoming tax season. 

CRA aiming to hire 1,700 call centre staff ahead of busy tax season

B.C. evacuation orders, alerts expand as floods cut off most links to Lower Mainland

B.C. evacuation orders, alerts expand as floods cut off most links to Lower Mainland
Evacuation orders and alerts in southern British Columbia expanded overnight, as floodwaters and landslides cut off most major routes between the Lower Mainland and the Interior.

B.C. evacuation orders, alerts expand as floods cut off most links to Lower Mainland

'Not what they're saying': Carney rejects suggestion U.S. may exit trade pact

'Not what they're saying': Carney rejects suggestion U.S. may exit trade pact
Prime Minister Mark Carney is pushing back on the suggestion that the U.S. may be considering pulling out of North America's trilateral free-trade pact.

'Not what they're saying': Carney rejects suggestion U.S. may exit trade pact

Virtual emergency care launching at four hospitals in B.C.'s Interior

Virtual emergency care launching at four hospitals in B.C.'s Interior
Patients seeking emergency care at four hospitals in British Columbia's Interior may now be seen by a doctor working virtually in a pilot project aimed at modernizing rural health services.

Virtual emergency care launching at four hospitals in B.C.'s Interior

Inside the Ring of Fire: A tale of two First Nations and a road that could change everything

Inside the Ring of Fire: A tale of two First Nations and a road that could change everything
First Nation elders understood the south would march north eventually. They knew it would come in waves, sometimes slow, sometimes fast. Those ancestors told their kids, who told theirs, and so on until today.

Inside the Ring of Fire: A tale of two First Nations and a road that could change everything