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Former Prime Minister Jean Chretien says officials attending the upcoming G7 leader Summit Albert should avoid involving US President Donald Trump’s “Crazy”.
Chretien, at a conference at Calgary at a conference, said drivers could not predict what Trump could do. He said the president could be a bully, and it would be best for the other G7 leaders to ignore some outbreaks.
“If he has decided to create a show to be in the news, he will do something crazy,” he said.
“Let him do it and continue to speak normally.”
Chretien said executives should follow the example of Prime Minister Mark Carnia when he visited Trump at the White House last month.
“When Trump talked about Canada about part of the United States (Kārni) just said that” Canada is not on sale, the White House is not sold, Buckingham Castle is not for sale, “Chretien said.
“Trump said,” Never say never “(but Karney) didn’t even answer. He just moved to the discussion. It’s a way to handle it.”
Charles is hosting Trump and world leaders from France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, Italy and the European Union at the top of the three -day top, which begins on Sunday in Kananaski, located in the rocky mountains to Southwest of Calgary.
Chretien, speaking with his former Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister John Manley, also said that Karny’s decision to invite Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the summit.
Karney has been criticized for the invitation, including his own liberal Caucasus member, due to the constant tension between Canada and India for foreign intervention and the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, Singh Nijjar, Sikh separatist activist in 2023
“It’s always good to talk,” Chretien said of the fashion invitation. “They will be able to talk and they will see that there are other problems.
“You have to move. You may not always go to your high horse for every little problem you are facing.”
Chretien was one of the two former Canadian prime ministers who spoke at a conference led by the University of Calgary Public Policy School and the G7 Study Group.
The University says the conference is designed to combine experts and officials to explain the main issues that the G7 leaders face at the top.
Former Prime Minister Joe Clark, born High River, Alta., Closed the conference, encouraging larger ties with the UK and France. He also offered similar tips to not allow any public theater to be involved in the summit during the summit.
“I don’t think there is something to throw my hands or criticize (Trump),” said Clark.
“I think it would be wise to have more private transactions and fewer public deals until the US president changes.”
Albert Prime Minister Danielle Smith also spoke at the conference.
She said the possibility that the economic and security transaction between Canada and the United States will be signed by the G7 would be an extraordinary step.
She encouraged Canada to continue to find new trading partners, even if the relationship between the two countries is starting to level out.
“Let’s not take our foot out of gas,” said Smith.
David Angels, a current foreign and defense policy advisor to Karnia, said in a separate commission that world leaders meet “a huge stream at the time of the world when the G7’s tensions are particularly pronounced.”
Karny said Monday that he was planning Canada to meet NATO’s spending guidelines until the beginning of next year.
Former Canadian Ambassador Angel NATO said the country had made a mistake, allowing the defense industry to “switch to some kind of peace.”
He said the G7 could be extremely established, and no other process allows you to discuss “bad issues”.