Joly says G7 foreign ministers ‘must meet the moment’ as she floats maritime projects
LA MALBAIE, Que. — Ministers representing some of the world’s most powerful countries gathered in a show of unity for liberal democracy Thursday, with Canada proposing maritime co-operation as the G7 splits on Ukraine and U.S. tariffs.
“We must meet the moment,” Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly told her counterparts from the U.S., Europe and Japan as she opened the Group of Seven foreign ministers’ meeting in the Charlevoix region, northeast of Quebec City. “We should not be daunted by the task.”
Earlier, Joly promised to raise American economic coercion and U.S. President Donald Trump’s calls for Canada’s annexation in her closed-door bilateral discussions.
But she limited her public remarks Thursday to shared priorities, noting that the G7 has made strides recently on defending Ukrainian sovereignty and countering foreign interference operations.



