
Canadian PM Mark Carney gestures as he visits a polling station to cast his vote in parliamentary election on April 29, 2025. — Instagram@markjcarney
#global #banker #prime #minister #Mark #Carneys #unprecedented #rise
Ottawa: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Karni has emerged as winning after winning the Canadian election on Monday.
Carney, who has a history of playing a role in the challenging moments, has achieved a period as the Prime Minister, despite any services in Parliament, which is unparalleled in Canadian history.
He said during the campaign, “I am the most useful in a crisis. I am not so good in peace.”
Karni, despite serving in Parliament, ever, achieved a period as Prime Minister, which is unprecedented in Canadian history.
Even despite the government’s experience, he convinced voters that his background was equipped to lead Canada through US President Donald Trump’s trade war to deal with financial turmoil.
A 60 -year -old married father of the four, Carney was born near the Arctic in Fort Smith in the northwestern Canada, but was raised in the western city of Edmonton.
Like many Canadians, he played hockey in his youth. He studied in Oxford, Harvard and England in the United States, and worked in New York, London, Tokyo and Toronto, an investment banker at the beginning of his career in Goldman Sex.
Carney then joined Canada’s Civil Service, eventually appointed the Governor of the Bank of Canada in 2008 by a conservative former Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
Shortly afterwards, the global financial crisis spread, and Carney was involved in a group along with Steering Canada through an international malfunction, which is relatively unclaimed.
In 2013, the then Prime Minister of the UK, David Cameron, tapped him to lead the Bank of England, making Carney the first non -British to lead the company before being established in 1694.
The UK then voted in favor of leaving the European Union, and Carney played a key role in assuring the markets after the 2016 Brexit vote.
When Canada announced that he was leaving the bank at the end of 2019, Sajid Javed, the then finance minister in the UK, said that Carney had led “with punishment, hardship and intelligence.”
In a recent appearance at a Canadian comedy show, the host – in the list of financial crisis, Brexit and Trump’s trade war list – joke Carney can be blamed for economic volatility.
Laughing, Carney said: “This is the other way. I have come to fix these things.”
Technocrats
Reports that Carney was interested in entering Canada politics.
In January, after the then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his resignation plans, Carney launched a campaign to lead the Liberal Party.
Analysts questioned whether a technocrat with no experience in retail politics could strengthen a party that could strengthen a party, as anger toward Trudeau has increased after a decade’s power.
Professor Laurie Turn Bill of Dlauzi University notes that Carney has “no dynamic communication style.”
And still he managed to win the Liberal Party, and the general election.
Carney was isolated during the campaign, but experts said he was the most effective moment when he took over the role of the Prime Minister and attacked Trump in front of a Canadian flag.
“We have ended the old relationship with the United States on the basis of the integration and strict security and military cooperation of our economies,” Carney said after unveiling his auto prices last month.
Personal wealth
After leaving the Bank of England, Carney wrote a book and became a UN adviser on climate change and finance.
He also returned to the private sector as chairman of a large multinational Canadian company Brookfield Asset Administration.
Carney faced tough questions about his private sector experience, including Brock Field to help reduce its Canadian tax burden.
When asked about personal wealth, he was exchanged with reporters.
Carney was pressured to disclose his assets, in which he has stock, so voters can decide whether they have faced a dispute as prime minister.
He confronted that he complied with the rules of Canadian ethics and put all his assets into blind confidence.
“Look inside yourself,” he told a reporter who had pressured him last month on his decision not to disclose his assets.
He alleged, “You start before and ugly the dispute.”
“I stand for Canada. I have left my role in the private sector during the crisis for my country.”