Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mark Carney pledges to beat Trudeau's target date for meeting NATO spending benchmark

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2025 10:46 AM
  • Mark Carney pledges to beat Trudeau's target date for meeting NATO spending benchmark

Liberal leadership contender Mark Carney has pledged to hit Canada's NATO defence spending target by the end of the decade — two years ahead of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's schedule.

“My government would work to reach two per cent of GDP in defence spending by the end of this decade, and pull our full weight in NATO,” Carney said Wednesday at a campaign event in Windsor, Ont.

Carney also promised a tax cut for the middle class and committed to cancelling the Liberal government's controversial hike to the capital gains inclusion rate.

Carney said he intends to reach the NATO target quickly while ensuring that defence funding is spent "wisely and effectively."

He also said he wants to ensure that "as much as possible" of that increased funding for defence — "potentially the majority of" it — is "spent here in Canada as opposed to the United States.”

Carney did not indicate he has a plan for deciding where the extra money for defence would go.

Rival candidate Chrystia Freeland has not yet released a platform plank on defence but her campaign spokeswoman Katherine Cuplinskas said the campaign would have something to say on this subject very soon.

"The world is increasingly volatile and dangerous. We must quickly meet our international commitments and defend our sovereignty," Cuplinskas said.

Ottawa formally committed in 2023 to spending the equivalent of two per cent of its GDP on national defence but has failed to come close to that target — one that most NATO members already meet.

Last summer, following backlash from Republican lawmakers in the U.S., Trudeau vowed Canadian defence spending would reach the two per cent benchmark by 2032.

That pledge came with a commitment to purchase up to 12 submarines, which would push Canada's defence spending past the NATO target. But no new money has been booked for that procurement project.

U.S. President Donald Trump recently said he wants NATO members to meet a new military spending benchmark of five per cent of GDP.

Defence Minister Bill Blair, who is endorsing Carney's leadership bid, has said he wants to see the federal government reach the two per cent target sooner. He said recently that hitting the two per cent target in two years is "absolutely achievable."

Gen. Jennie Carignan, the chief of Canada's defence staff, recently told The Canadian Press that "the global environment is telling us, and it's been telling us now for a little while, that the situation has changed and we need to transform to meet a different type of threat than we were used to in the last five years."

"We know very well that we need to transform and get the appropriate capabilities to be able to face those new threats that are here and that are going to become even more present in the future," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Bill Blair says Canada could hit NATO target in 2 years, but doesn't commit

Bill Blair says Canada could hit NATO target in 2 years, but doesn't commit
Defence Minister Bill Blair says Canada could hit its NATO defence spending target within just a few years if need be but didn't commit to doing so. NATO members have all committed to spend the equivalent of two per cent of its GDP on defence but Canada has consistently failed to reach that target.

Bill Blair says Canada could hit NATO target in 2 years, but doesn't commit

'You better pray we get elected': Doug Ford says he will call snap Ontario election

'You better pray we get elected': Doug Ford says he will call snap Ontario election
Ontario Premier Doug Ford plans to call a snap election Wednesday, seeking an even larger majority than his current government holds and using the threat of 25 per cent tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump as a justification. That election call would send Ontarians to the polls on Feb. 27, more than a year before the June 2026 fixed election date.

'You better pray we get elected': Doug Ford says he will call snap Ontario election

Crash closes Mission Bridge

Crash closes Mission Bridge
Police in Abbotsford say a 32-year-old man has been arrested after causing a head-on collision with another vehicle on Mission Bridge this morning. They say that around 12:30 a.m., an officer tried to stop the driver of a Mustang for a road violation, but he did not stop and fled the scene onto Highway 11, where he crashed into the other vehicle.

Crash closes Mission Bridge

Meet Poppy, an oil spill-sniffing dog and a scientific trailblazer

Meet Poppy, an oil spill-sniffing dog and a scientific trailblazer
Poppy, a six-year-old springer spaniel with floppy brown ears and a tail that never seems to stop wagging, is by all accounts a very good dog. Her white, brown speckled nose has also made her something of a trailblazer. 

Meet Poppy, an oil spill-sniffing dog and a scientific trailblazer

BC man arrested for hate crime

BC man arrested for hate crime
A Kelowna man has been arrested in Ontario in relation to a hate crime investigation in B-C. Police say the 41-year-old man is facing charges including public incitement of hatred and advocating or promoting genocide.

BC man arrested for hate crime

Quebec man sentenced to 30 years in U.S. prison for selling fake Xanax on dark web

Quebec man sentenced to 30 years in U.S. prison for selling fake Xanax on dark web
A Quebec man has been sentenced to 30 years in United States federal prison for his role in an international drug ring that imported millions of fake Xanax pills into that country. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says Arden McCann, 37, has been sentenced by a judge in Georgia for being "one of the largest drug vendors" on the dark web — a hidden part of the internet accessible through specialized software.

Quebec man sentenced to 30 years in U.S. prison for selling fake Xanax on dark web