Carney on defence as Poilievre, Singh accuse him of using Bermuda ‘tax havens’
- Pierre Poilievre accused Mark Carney of being beholden to China, raising concerns about potential conflicts of interest due to Carney's financial holdings.
- Carney stated he placed his assets in a blind trust and rejected Poilievre's claims, emphasizing he only owns cash and personal real estate.
- Carney has set up 'screens' in coordination with the ethics commissioner to avoid conflicts regarding his past corporate dealings.
- Jagmeet Singh and other leaders urged Carney for transparency about his assets and potential conflicts of interest related to tax havens.
36 Articles
36 Articles

Mixed messages: Carney Liberals pledge money for LNG while bridling against industry demands
The federal Liberals are sending mixed signals chastising the oil and gas industry for pushing back on climate measures while gifting $200 million to the Cedar LNG project backed by fossil fuel companies that enjoy healthy profit margins.
Carney set up a blind trust, screens to avoid conflicts of interest. Is that enough?
When Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre accused Mark Carney this week of being beholden to China, it raised questions as to whether the former board chair of Brookfield Asset Management, who may currently hold millions of dollars worth of stock in the company, has done enough to avoid potential conflicts.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources lean Left
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage