Friday, January 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Protecting Canada's sovereignty emerges as key topic at cabinet retreat

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2026 10:19 AM
  • Protecting Canada's sovereignty emerges as key topic at cabinet retreat

Prime Minister Mark Carney and his cabinet are using their second day of meetings in Quebec City to discuss safeguarding Canada's sovereignty, says a minister at the retreat.

Speaking to reporters Friday morning, Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation Evan Solomon said ministers are focused on creating good jobs for Canadians and investing in key sectors to build "a safe, sovereign and secure, strong economy."

"We are very excited that we're working together to build our plan on a safe, sovereign country," Solomon said.

The ministers are in the province's capital for a second day of meetings ahead of Parliament's return on Monday.

Carney is expected to answer media questions later Friday. 

During the two-day retreat, Carney and his cabinet are hearing from experts in government, finance, community services, advanced technology and global affairs.

Speakers participating in the discussions include Thomas Juneau, assistant professor at the University of Ottawa's school of public and international affairs, and Nadir Patel, chancellor at Wilfrid Laurier University, former high commissioner to India and former consul general to Shanghai.

Joelle Pineau, chief AI officer at Cohere, will also participate. 

The federal government signed an agreement with Cohere in August to identify areas where AI can enhance public service operations.

Janice Stein, Belzberg professor of conflict management at the University of Toronto, is attending virtually from Toronto.

Carney kicked off the retreat Thursday with a speech arguing that staying true to Canada's core values will be key to upholding its sovereignty in what he called a new age of great power coercion.

He also took the opportunity to push back against U.S. President Donald Trump's claim that "Canada lives because of the United States."

"But Canada doesn't live because of the United States," Carney said. "Canada thrives because we are Canadian."

Most ministers and secretaries of state dodged questions from reporters while walking into the meeting Friday morning.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand stopped to share brief remarks after Trump announced he had rescinded an invitation to Carney to join his new "Board of Peace." 

In a post on social media Thursday night, Trump did not explain why he was withdrawing Carney's invitation to sit on the board, which was initially launched with the aim of helping to end the two-year war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza and oversee reconstruction

In his post, Trump called the body "the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time."

His decision is the latest eruption in the relationship between Canada and the United States and comes just as a critical trade agreement is set to be reviewed.

When asked for comment about Trump rescinding Carney's invitation, the White House referred The Canadian Press to the president's post on social media.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Anand said Hamas "should have no role in the future governance of Palestine."

"Hamas must demilitarize and disarm. There must be a ceasefire and Israelis and Palestinians must be able to live in peace and security side by side," she said.

The minister said Canada will continue delivering humanitarian aid and she is "constantly" in touch with her G7 counterparts.

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne told reporters Thursday that a key theme of the cabinet retreat is affordability. He called it the Carney government's major "objective and mission."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot

MORE National ARTICLES

Carney agrees 'in principle' to Trump's Gaza peace board; details to be worked out

Carney agrees 'in principle' to Trump's Gaza peace board; details to be worked out
Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters Sunday he has agreed in principle to join U.S. President Donald Trump's controversial "Board of Peace," meant to support the reconstruction of Gaza.

Carney agrees 'in principle' to Trump's Gaza peace board; details to be worked out

Carney says Qatar will make 'significant' investments in Canada's major projects

Carney says Qatar will make 'significant' investments in Canada's major projects
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Qatar has committed to "significant strategic investments" for Canada's major building projects.

Carney says Qatar will make 'significant' investments in Canada's major projects

Carney 'concerned' about U.S. 'escalation' on Greenland after tariffs

Carney 'concerned' about U.S. 'escalation' on Greenland after tariffs
Prime Minister Mark Carney says he is "concerned" about U.S. "escalation" on its push to buy Greenland after it threatened to impose tariffs on eight European nations opposed to the U.S. plan for the self-governing Danish territory.

Carney 'concerned' about U.S. 'escalation' on Greenland after tariffs

Carney says Chinese EV deal an 'opportunity' for Ontario, auto sector

Carney says Chinese EV deal an 'opportunity' for Ontario, auto sector
Prime Minister Mark Carney said that the electric vehicle deal with China is an "opportunity" for Ontario and autoworkers, despite criticism from Premier Doug Ford and the union representing Canadian autoworkers. 

Carney says Chinese EV deal an 'opportunity' for Ontario, auto sector

Vancouver conference aims to unite Indigenous tech community

Vancouver conference aims to unite Indigenous tech community
For Shauna McAllister, working at Canadian technology companies as a Cree and Métis woman meant she was often the only Indigenous person in the room.

Vancouver conference aims to unite Indigenous tech community

Layoff notices sent to thousands of federal government workers

Layoff notices sent to thousands of federal government workers
Thousands of workers across the federal public service have received notices that their jobs may be cut, many of them just in the last week.

Layoff notices sent to thousands of federal government workers