Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Trump to Canada’s Mark Carney: you are uninvited to my ‘board of peace’ – as it happened

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Trump tells Canada’s prime minister he is no longer invited to join his ‘board of peace’

In a post on his social media platform, apparently posted from Air Force One, Donald Trump has informed Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, that he is no longer invited to join the “board of peace” the US president unveiled to the world with much fanfare at Davos on Thursday.

“Dear Prime Minister Carney,” Trump’s post began. “Please let this Letter serve to represent that the Board of Peace is withdrawing its invitation to you regarding Canada’s joining, what will be, the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time.”

While the leaders of many liberal democracies declined to sign on the Trump’s new international organization, Carney had, before Davos, accepted in principle, though he said on Sunday his officials had not yet gone through “all the details of the structure, how it’s going to work, what the financing is for, etcetera.”

“Canada wants money to have maximum impact,” Carney told reporters.

Canada’s finance minister, François-Philippe Champagne, then said on Tuesday that the Canadians did not plan to pay the $1bn countries were asked to hand over to Trump for a permanent seat on the board that was originally described as a temporary body to oversee the governance and reconstruction of Gaza.

In a frank address to world leaders at Davos on Tuesday, however, Carney described what he called “a rupture” in the previous “rules-based” world order overseen by the United States caused by Trump’s aggressive behavior.

When he arrived in Davos, Trump made it clear that he had heard or at least heard of Carney’s viral speech.

“Canada lives because of the United States,” Trump said in his own address on Wednesday. “Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.”

“Canada doesn’t live because of the United States,” Carney responded Thursday. “Canada thrives because we are Canadian.”

Key events

Closing summary

With the news that Air Force One has returned Donald Trump from his bruising trip to Davos, this concludes our live coverage of his second administration for the day. We will return on Friday. Here are the latest developments:

  • Having spent 11 months trying to conceal the bruising on his right hand from public view, Donald Trump developed a large bruise on his left hand on Thursday. His chief spokesperson, Karoline Leavitt, deflected questions about hte prsident’s health by claiming that the damage to his hand was caused by a collision with a table during an event at Davos earlier in the day. But then again, the previous day, she accused a reporter of lying for accurately reporting that the president, who turns 80 in a few months, repeatedly referred to Greenland as “Iceland” while staking a territorial claim to one of those places.

  • The United States formally withdrew from the World Health Organization with a statement in which the health secretary, RFK Jr, and the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, accused the body of botching the response to Covid-19 – the pandemic Trump downplayed as president – and of trying to steal an American flag.

  • Trump informed Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, that he is no longer invited to join the “board of peace” the US president unveiled to the world with much fanfare at Davos on Thursday.

  • By a vote of 220-207, the US House narrowly passed legislation to fund the Department of Homeland Security, which includes the two agencies carrying out Trump’s mass deportation raids, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Seven Democrats voted for the funding.

  • Asked when he might be willing to allow Venezuela to elect a new leader, Trump said his first priority was keeping control of the nation’s oil sales. “First of all, we have to take in a lot of money, we have to get that back”, he said.

  • Trump again warned Iran not to kill protesters, or else. “Nobody knows a number. I mean it’s a lot no matter what. Hey, if it was one person,” the president said. “In this country if it’s one person, it’s front-page news”, he added, in apparent reference to the killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis this month by an ICE officer, which he immediately lied about and dismissed.

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