Features
“We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition – Canada’s PM, Marc Carney
Trump declares war on Canada, its nearest neighbor and closest ally
Donald Trump is big enough to change his views as the years go by. At the turn of the century, Trump was a Democrat, a great friend of the Clintons and a regular contributor to the liberal cause. He was pro-choice (a decision probably dictated by his regular, usually paid for or forced sexual escapades). In an interview with the New York Times in 2002, Trump said Jeffrey Epstein was a “terrific guy. I’ve known him for years. He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side”.
In turn, Epstein has said that Trump was his closest friend for decades. His political enemies who contested him at the Republican primaries in 2015 and insulted him with vilest of names, are now his greatest sycophants. The most pathetic being Marco Rubio, who belittled the size of Trump’s penis during a presidential debate. Rubio is now the Secretary of State of the United States, Trump’s closest admirer. Politics indeed makes the strangest bedfellows.
At a joint appearance with Justin Trudeau, then Prime Minister of Canada, at the White House in 2017, Trump said, “America is deeply fortunate to have a neighbor like Canada”, highlighting “the special bonds that come when two nations have shed their blood together – which we have”. He concluded his remarks by saying “We have before us the opportunity to build even more bridges, and bridges of cooperation and bridges of commerce”. Trump signed a security report in December 2017 that “Canada and the United States share a unique strategic and defense partnership”.
Trump has proved his greatness by his flexibility, his unparalleled ability to change many of his views with changes in circumstances. However, his unique, defining character has never changed – he remains the pathological liar with a malignant narcissistic syndrome, which has now, with age, reached its breaking point, to the cusp of dementia. An obdurate trait that spells danger to the entire world.
Fast forward to the present day. Trump is the most radical Republican who has threatened to prosecute Hillary Clinton for treason and imprison her for life. He is now a rabid pro-lifer, and his 6/3 majority Supreme Court rescinded the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling of 1973, which has now made abortion illegal in some Republican States.
His erstwhile “best friend”, Jeffrey Epstein was a “creep he hardly knew”, which will be shown to be just another Trump lie, as his unredacted name and photographs partying with Epstein and women “on the younger side” will appear on the Epstein files thousands of times. Trump was crass enough to post a picture on social media of former President Barack Obama and Michelle, still the most popular couple in the world, in the guise of apes. The unapologetic white supremacist mentality of a white plantation owner during the good old days of slavery.
And Canada is now the most dangerous enemy of the United States, a weak nation dependent on the United States for its economy and defense, run by a Prime Minister, Marc Carney, according to Trump, a “banking loser”.
A word about the aforementioned “banking loser”. Marc Carney, 60 years of age, had never aspired to be a politician. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Harvard, inspired by the teachings of internationally-famed Canadian economist, John Kenneth Galbraith, who helped President Franklin Roosevelt to successfully negotiate the Great Depression of the 1930’s with the New Deal. Galbraith was a professor of economics at Harvard for over 50 years, authored 46 books and helped usher in the Affluent Society in post-war US in the 1950s.
Carney went on to Oxford, where he earned his Master’s and Doctorate in Economics (MPhil and DPhil) by 1995. He worked at Goldman Sachs before joining the Bank of Canada as a deputy governor in 2003. Carney then served as the eigth governor of the Bank of Canada from 2008 to 2013. He oversaw the global financial crisis in 2008. His economic policies ensured that Canadian Banks remained stable, not one faced closure, while over 25 US banks either failed or were forced into merger.
In 2013, after his first term as governor of the Bank of Canada, Carney became the first non-British citizen to be appointed as the 120th governor of the Bank of England. He served in this capacity till 2020, leading Britain’s response to BREXIT and the early phase of the Covid pandemic.
After several management roles in the private sector, on Justin Trudeau’s resignation as Prime Minister in January 2025, Carney entered the Liberal Party leadership election, winning in a landslide, becoming the first Canadian Prime Minister never to have held elected office.
Rather like Donald Trump’s victory in 2016. Trump also won the US presidency never having held elected office in his checkered career. However, a major part of Trump’s work experience was not in banking but in declaring bankruptcies of his own companies.
At a White House meeting in May 2025, Trump told Carney that Canada lives because of the United States, which is responsible for its economy and defense. Implying that it would make sense for Canada to ignore the “artificial border” between the two states and become the 51st state of the USA. Carney politely told Trump that the people he represents, the Canadians, will never agree to such a ridiculous offer, that Canada will never be for sale.
Carney repeated Canada’s position during a speech he made at the 56th World Economic Forum held in Davos, Switzerland from January 19 – 23, 2026, attended by heads of state, leaders of international organizations and business tycoons.
The main speeches at this Forum were those of Donald Trump, who spoke after Marc Carney. Trump’s comments were the usual monotonous narcissistic jargon, a lie with each breath. While Carney stole the thunder with a speech that proposed a fundamental change in the international geopolitical order. He received a standing ovation for one of the finest political speeches in my memory.
Extracts:
“Today, I will talk about the rupture in the world order, the end of a nice story and the beginning of a brutal reality where geopolitics among the great powers is not subject to any constraints.
“It seems that every day, we’re reminded that we live in an era of great power rivalry…. That the strong can do what they can, and the weak must suffer what they must.
“The aphorism of Thucydides is presented as inevitable – as the natural logic of international relations reasserting itself. And faced with logic, there is a strong tendency for countries to get along. To accommodate. To avoid trouble. To hope that compliance will buy safety.
“Well, it won’t.
“Let me be direct. We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition.
“And the question for middle powers, like Canada, is not whether to adapt to the new reality – we must.
“Middle powers must act together because if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu.
“But I’d also say that great powers can afford, for now, to go it alone. They have the market size, the military capacity and the leverage to dictate terms. Middle powers do not. But when we only negotiate bilaterally with a hegemon, we negotiate from weakness, accept what’s offered. We compete with each other to be the most accommodating,
“That is not sovereignty. It’s the performance of sovereignty while accepting subordination.
“We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy.
“The powerful have their power. But we have something too – the capacity to stop pretending, to name reality, to build our strength at home and to act together.
“That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently.
“And it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us”.
Directly after Carney’s speech, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he “backed the speech made by his Canadian counterpart, decrying powerful nations using economic integration as weapons and tariffs as leverage”.
PM Albanese invited Marc Carney to address the Australian Parliament in March, an honor usually reserved for the President of the United States. A certain sign that Australia, hitherto the strongest ally of the United States in the Southern Hemisphere, will join Carney in this battle against the superpowers. Others will surely follow.
As for Trump’s speech, I will ignore his introductory lies about the US being the hottest nation in the world, that he has achieved more in the first year of the second term of his presidency than other presidents have achieved in their full two terms. Fact-checkers have never been so busy.
After a lengthy account of why he must acquire Greenland, (a fellow NATO ally), threatening both Denmark and NATO with the classic Mafia phrase, “We’ll do it the easy way, or we’ll do it the hard way”, he stressed that the US needs Greenland for “international security”.
Then he started on Canada, and made the blunder which will turn most Americans, even Republicans, away from him. Canada and the USA have had a friendship that has endured for centuries, and many Americans have close ties with their neighbors.
America First is America Alone, and Trump has made the USA hated around the world. He is sucking up to the totalitarian leaders of the world – Putin, XI Jinping, even Kim Jung Un, smart, murderous dictators who are playing him like a Stradivarius. And worse, he is encouraging Netanyahu to commit genocide in Gaza, and achieve a one-state solution for Israel. The promised land.
Referring to the Canadian Prime Minister’s speech yesterday, Trump said, “Canada gets a lot of freebies from us, by the way. They should be grateful also, but they are not. I watched your Prime Minister yesterday, he wasn’t so grateful. They should be grateful to the US. Canada lives because of the United States”. Ending with the typical threat of the bully: “Remember that, Marc, the next time you make your statements”.
Another Mafia-style threat, one which will only encourage Marc Carney to lead more middle powers, hopefully including developing nations like Sri Lanka, determined to unite and change the current world order to a more equitable global landscape.
by Vijaya Chandrasoma
Features
Viktor Orban, Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump: The Terrible Threes of the 21st Century
In the autumn of 1956, Hungary staged the first uprising against the 20th century Soviet behemoth. Seventy years later, in the spring of 2026 Hungary has delivered the first electoral thrashing against 21st century right wing populism in Europe. The 1956 uprising was crushed after seven days. But the opposition scored a landslide victory in Hungary’s parliamentary election held on Sunday, April 12 and. Viktor Orban, Prime Minister since 2010 and the architect of what he proudly called “the illiberal state”, was resoundingly defeated. Orban who has been a pain in the neck for the European Union was a close ally of US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Trump even dispatched his Vice President JD Vance to Budapest to campaign for Orban. After Orban’s defeat, Trump and his MAGA followers may be having nightmares about the US midterm elections in November. Similarly, Orban’s defeat has reportedly caused “great concern in the halls of power in Jerusalem.” Netanyahu has lost his only ally in the European Union and the opposition victory in Hungary does not augur well for his own electoral prospects in the Israeli elections due in October.
Ceasefire Hopes
Trump and Netanyahu have bigger things to worry about in the Middle East and among their own political bases. Trump is going bonkers, blasphemously imitating Christ and badmouthing the Pope, launching a blockade in the Strait of Hormuz and strong arming more talks in Islamabad. Netanyahu has been forced to sit on his hands, pausing his fight against Iran while pursuing peace talks with Lebanon. The leaders and diplomats from Pakistan, Egypt and Turkey are shuttling around drumming up support for another round of talks in Islamabad and a prolonged extension of the ceasefire.
Further talks in Islamabad and potential extension of the ceasefire received a new boost by Trump’s announcement of a new 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon. The background to this development appears to be Iran’s insistence on having this secondary ceasefire, and Trump insisting on ceasefire abidance by Hezbollah in return for his ordering Netanyahu to stop his brutal ‘lawn mowing’ in Lebanon. All of this might seem to augur well for a potential extension of the primary ceasefire between the US and Iran. There are also reports of the narrowing of gap between the two parties – involving a potential moratorium on Iran’s uranium enrichment, the opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran’s access to its frozen assets estimated to be $100 billion.
Meanwhile the IMF has released its latest World Economic Outlook with a grim forecast. “Once again, says the report, “the global economy is threatened with being thrown off the course – this time by the outbreak of war in the Middle East.” Before the war, the IMF was expected to upgrade its growth forecasts for the global economy. Now it is going to be weaker growth and higher inflation with oil price optimistically stabilizing around $100 a barrel in 2026 and $75 a barrel in 2027. In a worst case scenario, if the oil prices were to hit $110 in 2026 and $125 in 2027, growth everywhere will further weaken and inflation will go further up in countries big and small.
In a joint statement on the Middle East, the Finance Ministers of the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, Sweden, Netherlands, Finland, Spain, Norway, Republic of Ireland, Poland and New Zealand have called on the IMF and World Bank “to provide a coordinated emergency support offer for countries in need, tailored to country circumstances and drawing on the full range and flexibility of their tool kits.” They have also welcomed “advice on domestic responses that are temporary, targeted, and effective, and encourage work to identify steps needed to protect long-term growth.”
Subversion from the Right
The two men, Trump and Netanyahu, who started the war and precipitated the current crisis are not being held accountable by anyone and they are still free to do what they want and as they please. The third man, Victor Orban, who did not have anything to do with the war but extended wholehearted ideological and political support as a faithful apprentice to the two older sorcerers, has been democratically defeated. Together, they formed the terrible threes of the 21st century, spearheading a subversion from the right of the emerging liberal status quo of the post Cold War world. Orban’s defeat is a significant setback to the illiberal right, but it is not the end of it.
The three emerged in the specific historical contexts of their own polities that are both vastly different and yet share powerful ingredients that have proved to be politically potent. The broader context has been the end of the Cold War and the removal of the perceived external threat which opened up the domestic political space in the US, for locking horns over primarily cultural standpoints and climate politics. This era began with the Clinton presidency in 1992 and the election of Barack Obama 16 years later, in 2008, created the illusion of a post-racial America.
In reality, the right was able to push back – first with the younger Bush presidency (2000-2008) pursuing compassionate conservatism, and later with the foray of Trump (2016-2020) threatening to end what he called the “American Carnage.” Of the 32 years since the election of Bill Clinton, Democrats have controlled the White House for 20 years over five presidential terms (Clinton – two, Obama – two, and Biden -one), while the Republicans won three terms (Bush – two, Trump – one) spanning 12 years.
Trump has since won a second term for another four years, but already in his five+ years in office he has issued executive orders to roll back almost all of the liberal advancements in the realms of civil rights, equality, diversity and inclusion. All that the celebrated acronym DEI (Diversity, Equality and Inclusion) stands for has been executively ordered to be banished from the state, its agencies and its programs.
In Europe, the European Union became the champion and bulwark of liberalism and subsidiarity, which in turn provoked the rise of right wing populism in every member country. Brexit was the loudest manifestation against what was considered to be EU’s overreach, but after Britain’s bitter Brexit experience the populists in the European countries gave up on demanding their own exit and limited themselves to fighting the EU from their national bases.
Viktor Orban became the face and voice of anti-EU nationalists. But he and his political party, the Christian Nationalist Fidesz – Hungarian Civic Alliance, are not the only one. Nigel Farage’s Reform UK in Britain and Marine Le Pen’s National Rally Party in France are becoming real electoral contenders, while right wing presidents have been elected in Argentina and Chile.
The rise and fall of Viktor Orban
Of the three terribles, Orban is the youngest but with the longest involvement in politics. Born in 1963, Viktor Orban became a political activist as a 15-year old high schooler, becoming secretary of a Young Communist League local. He continued his activism while studying law in Budapest, visiting Poland and writing his thesis on the Polish Solidarity movement, giving lectures in West Germany and the US as a potential future Hungarian leader, and undertaking research on European civil society at Pembroke College, Oxford.
At the age of 26, Orban gained national prominence with a speech he delivered on June 16, 1989 in Budapest’s Heroes’ Square to mark the reburial of Imre Nagy and other Hungarians killed in the 1956 uprising. Imre Nagy was the leader of the 1956 Hungarian uprising against the puppet Soviet Union outpost in Budapest.
To digress and make a local connection – the pages of Sri Lanka’s parliamentary Hansard of 1956, contain an impressive record of the political debate in Sri Lanka over the events in Hungary. The LSSP’s Colvin R de Silva eloquently led the Trotskyite prosecution of the Soviet invasion of Hungary and the suppression of its freedoms. Pieter Keuneman of the Communist Party used his wit and debating skills to defend the indefensible. GG Ponnambalam, the unrepentant anti-communist, used the opportunity to take swipes on both sides. Finally, for the government, Prime Minister SWRD Bandaranaike deployed his own oratorical skills to empathize with the uprising without condemning the USSR. The four men were Sri Lanka’s foremost verbal gladiators and they used the occasion to put on quite a display of their talents.
Back to Hungary, where Orban began his political vocation identifying himself with Imre Nagy and demanding the withdrawal of the Soviet army from Hungary and calling for free elections in that country to elect a new government. That same year in 1989, Fidesz was recognized as a political party; Orban became its leader four years later in 1993 and led the party and its allies to their first victory and formed a new government in 1998. At age 35 Orban became the second youngest Prime Minister in Hungary’s history.
During his first term, Orban started well on the economy, reducing inflation and the budget deficit, was welcomed to the White House by President George W. Bush, and led Hungary to join NATO overruling Russian objections. But the slide into authoritarianism and corruption was just as quick, including the attempt to replace the two-thirds parliamentary majority requirement by a simple majority. By the end of the term the ruling coalition disintegrated and Orban lost the 2002 election and became the leader of the opposition over the next two terms till 2010.
Orban returned to power with a two-thirds majority in 2010 and immediately introduced a new constitution that set the stage for ushering in the illiberal state. What had been previously a communist state now became a Christian state where ‘traditional values’ of gender rights, sexuality, and exclusive nationalism were constitutionally enshrined. The electoral system was changed reducing the number parliamentarians from 386 to 199 – with 103 of them directly elected and 93 assigned proportionately. Orban went on to win three more elections over 16 years – in 2014, 2018 and 2022 – each with a two-thirds majority, and used the time and power to transform Hungary into a conservative fortress in Europe.
The new constitution and its frequent amendments were used to centralize legislative and executive power, curb civil liberties, restrict freedom of speech and the media, and to weaken the constitutional court and judiciary. It was his opposition to non-white immigration that made him “the talisman of Europe’s mainstream right”. He described immigration as the West’s answer to its declining population and flatly rejected it as a solution for Hungary. Instead, he told his compatriots, “we need Hungarian children.” His ‘Orbanomics’ policies restricted abortion and encouraged family formation – forgiving student debt for female students having or adopting children, life-long tax holiday for women with four or more children, and sponsoring fixed-rate mortgages for married couples.
Orban wanted to make Hungary an “ideological center for … an international conservative movement”. Orban heaped praise on Jair Bolsonaro for making Brazil the best example of a “modern Christian democracy.” He endorsed Trump in every one of Trump’s three presidential elections, the only European leader to do so. In return, Orban has been described by US MAGA ideologue Steve Bannon as “Trump before Trump.” Orban’s attack on universities for being the citadels of liberalism have found their echoes in Trump’s America and Modi’s India.
For all his efforts in making Hungary a conservative ideological centre, Viktor Orban’s undoing came about because of Hungary’s growing economic crises and the depth of corruption and systemic nepotism that engulfed the government. The economy has tanked over the last three years with rising prices and the national debt reaching 75% of the GDP – the highest among East European countries. Orban’s critics have exposed and the people have experienced systemic corruption that enabled the siphoning of public wealth into private accounts, the creation of a ‘neo-feudal capitalist class’, and the enrichment of family and friends. Orban’s corruption became the central plank of the opposition platform that Peter Magyar and his Tisza Party presented to the voters and caused his ouster after 16 years.
The Prime Minister elect is not a dyed in the wool liberal, but a member of a conservative Budapest family, and a politician cut from the old Orban cloth. Magyar (literally meaning “Hungarian”) was once a “powerful insider” in the Fidesz government – notably active in foreign affairs, while his ex-wife was once the Minister of Justice in Orban’s cabinet. Mr. Magyar may not fully roll back all of Orban’s illiberalism, but he has committed himself to eliminating corruption, increasing social welfare spending, limiting the prime ministerial tenure to two terms, and being more pro-European, EU and NATO.
EU and European leaders have openly welcomed the change in Hungary, and may be looking for the new government to change Orban’s vetoing of a number of EU initiatives, especially those involving assistance to Ukraine. In return, the new government in Hungary will be expecting the unfreezing of as much as $33 billion funds that the EU extraordinarily chose to freeze as punishment for Orban’s illiberal initiatives in Hungary. For Trump and Netanyahu, the defeat of Viktor Orban removes their only ally and supporter in all of Europe.
by Rajan Philips
Features
ICONS:A Dialogue Across Centuries
Sky Gallery of the Fareed Uduman Art Forum is dedicated to bringing audiences, cultures, and time periods together through meaningful and accessible art experiences to create the closest possible encounters with the world’s greatest paintings. Previous exhibitions include, Gustav Klimt, Frida Kahlo, Paul Gauguin, Vincent Van Gogh, Salvador Dali.
ICONS is conceived as “a dialogue across centuries” bringing together over a dozen artistic geniuses whose works span the Renaissance to the modern era. These works at their original scales of creation changes the conversation. You can finally stand in front of a life-size Vermeer or a monumental Monet and feel the dialogue between artists who never met but shaped each other across time. Each exhibit is meticulously presented on canvas, hand-framed, and finished at the exact dimensions of the original masterpieces, preserving the integrity of composition, texture, brushwork, color and scale.
At the heart of the exhibition is Jan van Eyck’s ‘Arnolfini Portrait’, a work that epitomizes the detail, symbolism, and human intimacy that have inspired generations of artists. Alongside it, visitors will encounter paintings that shaped the renaissance, impressionism, modernism, and the evolution of visual storytelling by Munch, Matisse, Monet, Degas, Da Vinci, Renoir, Vermeer, Rembrandt, Cézanne, Caravaggio, and more. The exhibition invites audiences to experience a rare conversation across centuries of artistic brilliance.
By bringing together works that are geographically and historically dispersed, ICONS creates a compelling space for comparison, reflection, and discovery. Visitors are invited to move beyond passive viewing into a more engaged encounter—tracing artistic influence, identifying stylistic shifts, and uncovering unexpected connections between artists who never shared the same physical space, yet remain deeply interconnected across time.
Designed and curated for both seasoned art enthusiasts and first-time visitors, ICONS offers an experience that is at once educational, immersive, and accessible—removing many of the traditional barriers associated with global museum-going.
Exhibition Details:
Dates: April 24 – May 3
Time: 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM (Monday – Sunday)
Venue: Sky Gallery Colombo 5
Features
Our Teardrop
BOOK REVIEW
Ranoukh Wijesinha (2026)
Published by Jam Fruit Tree Publications.
82 pages. Softcover. ISBN 978-624-6633-81-3
The author is a graduate teacher at St. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia; his alma mater. On leaving school he read for a Bachelor of Arts Degree in English Language and English Literature at the University of Nottingham (Malaysia). On graduating, in 2024, he went back to his old school to teach these same disciplines. There seems to be a historic logic to this as his grandfather, a notable Thomian of his day, also started his working career as a teacher at the College before moving on to the world of publishing; as a newspaper journalist and sub-editor.
On his maternal side, Wijesinha’s grandfather was an accomplished journalist, thespian and playwright of his day, and his mother is also a much sought after teacher of English and English Literature and, as acknowledged by him, his first, and foremost, English teacher.
Though there are some well-written, almost lyrical, pieces of prose in this publication, it is the poetry that dominates. Written with a sensitivity to people and events he has either observed himself, or as described to him by those who did, it also encompasses all genres of poetic verse, from the classical to the modern, including sonnets, acrostics, haiku to free and blank verse, the latter more in vogue today. All in all, it presents as a celebration of English poetry and its ability to, sometimes, express depth of thought and feeling far better than prose.
Dedicated to his mentor at St. Thomas’, his Drama and Singing Master had been a great influence on Wijesinha His sudden, premature, death understandably came as a shock to the still developing student under his tutelage. The poems “The Man who Made Me” and “The Curtain Called” best demonstrate this. In addition, it is apparent that Wijesinha has endured much mental trauma in his young life. Spending much time on his own, the questions these moments have raised are expressed in “When No One is Listening”, “There was a Time”, “Midnight Walks” and the prose “A Ramble through Colombo”.
However, the majority of the poems concern ‘Our Teardrop’, Sri Lanka, for whom the writer has a great love. He explores its history, its natural wonders, its people, its tragedies, its corruption and the hope that things will get better for all its people. “Bala’ and “Dicky” address a time of violence from days gone by when there were few glories, just victims. “Easter Sunday” brings this almost to the present time.
There also is humour. “Ado, Machang, Bro, Dude” celebrates his friends and friendships in a way that will reverberate with all the present and previous generations of those who are, or were once, in their late teens and early twenties.
There is little to criticise in this first of the writer’s forays into published works except, as referred to previously, to re-state that the prose quails in the face of the power of the poetry. It is all well written, filled with passion and compassion, and gives comfort that there still are young Sri Lankan writers who can be this brave, and write so powerfully, and profoundly, in English. It is hoped that this is just the first of many from the pen of this young writer.
L S M Pillai
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