Mark Carney Calls for New World Order Excluding USA at G20

At the 2025 G20 Summit in Johannesburg, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney openly advocated for a “New World Order” built around a unified global government that deliberately excludes the United States. With Washington boycotting the event, Carney highlighted that nations representing 75% of the world’s population and two-thirds of global GDP successfully issued a full declaration without U.S. approval. He described the moment as proof that “the center of gravity in the global economy is shifting” toward a post-American era. Carney is aggressively diversifying Canada’s alliances—securing record C$70 billion UAE investments and deepening ties with China, India, and South Africa—while positioning Canada as a leader in an emerging multipolar or global-governance framework that no longer depends on American leadership.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney used the G20 stage in Johannesburg to call for a New World Order defined by a global government that excludes the United States and counterbalances American influence in the world.

With Washington boycotting the summit, Carney argued that the rest of the world can exclude the US and “make progress” together towards the liberal dream of a unified global government.

For many, this was more than diplomatic commentary. It was a glimpse into what globalists are trying to promote as the “post-American governance era.”

The South African-hosted summit proceeded despite the Trump administration’s refusal to attend, a move triggered by Trump’s repetition of a debunked claim that White Afrikaner farmers are facing genocide. Officials in Washington insisted that in America’s absence, only a “chairman’s summary” should be released.

South Africa ignored the demand, issuing a full declaration anyway — a symbolic moment in which global powers demonstrated they could act collectively without U.S. approval.

Carney underscored this dynamic. He noted that the summit included nations representing:

  • Three-quarters of the world’s population
  • Two-thirds of global GDP
  • Three-quarters of global trade

And all of it happened “without the United States formally attending.”

Mark Carney Calls for New World Order Excluding USA at G20

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney used the G20 stage in Johannesburg to call for a New World Order defined by a global government that excludes the United States and counterbalances American influence in the world.

With Washington boycotting the summit, Carney argued that the rest of the world can exclude the US and “make progress” together towards the liberal dream of a unified global government.

For many, this was more than diplomatic commentary. It was a glimpse into what globalists are trying to promote as the “post-American governance era.”

The South African-hosted summit proceeded despite the Trump administration’s refusal to attend, a move triggered by Trump’s repetition of a debunked claim that White Afrikaner farmers are facing genocide. Officials in Washington insisted that in America’s absence, only a “chairman’s summary” should be released.

South Africa ignored the demand, issuing a full declaration anyway — a symbolic moment in which global powers demonstrated they could act collectively without U.S. approval.

Carney underscored this dynamic. He noted that the summit included nations representing:

  • Three-quarters of the world’s population
  • Two-thirds of global GDP
  • Three-quarters of global trade

And all of it happened “without the United States formally attending.”

To Carney, this was evidence that “the center of gravity in the global economy is shifting.” To others, it sounded like a quiet announcement that a new global structure is emerging, one not anchored in Washington.

A Leader Focused on Detaching Canada From U.S. Influence

Carney rose to power earlier this year on a campaign that pushed back against Trump’s tariffs and even against suggestions that Canada could be absorbed into U.S. territory. Since taking office, he has repeatedly signaled a desire to diversify Canada’s alliances and reduce dependence on its southern neighbor.

At the Johannesburg press conference, he outlined sweeping attempts to build deeper ties with major players such as South Africa, India, and China — three nations central to the multipolar world vision.

His recent diplomatic outreach is unprecedented in scale. Just days earlier, after a meeting in Abu Dhabi with UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, the Gulf nation pledged a staggering C$70 billion (US$50 billion) investment into Canada. Carney called it the largest investment commitment in his country’s history.

A New Global Economic Map?

Carney framed these developments as part of a broader realignment designed to position Canada within what he described as expanding networks across the Indo-Pacific, Europe, and multiple emerging economies.

“We’re signing new deals and finding new investors to fuel our plans for Canada’s economic ambition,” he said. “We’ll expand trade and catalyze investment in increased partnerships across a range of areas from AI to energy.”

For mainstream analysts, this is simply economic diversification.
For others, it raises deeper questions:

  • Is Carney signaling support for a new unified global governance bloc?
  • Is Canada positioning itself as a model nation for a world order not centered on the U.S.?
  • Is this how a global “consensus system” begins — through summits proceeding without American oversight?

The G-20’s ability to operate smoothly, issue declarations, and present a united front without the U.S. — combined with Carney’s emphasis on a shifting global center of gravity — is already prompting speculation that the architecture of planetary governance is being assembled in plain sight.

Whether this is decentralization, multipolarity, or the quiet construction of a global government, one thing is clear: Mark Carney is telling the world that the future no longer depends on the United States.

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