Carney has sketched the broad strokes of an AI policy, but details remain vague
At the Paris AI Action Summit in February, then-prime minister Justin Trudeau and other world leaders watched as U.S. Vice President JD Vance took the stage to rail against AI regulation.
Vance’s speech — delivered with his face projected on a large screen between the intricately-carved pillars lining the stage at the historic Grand Palais — marked the beginning of a global shift in governments’ attitudes toward AI governance.
That shift hit Canada a month later, when Mark Carney replaced Trudeau as prime minister and signalled a new approach to artificial intelligence in this country.
Under the Trudeau Liberals, then-industry minister François-Philippe Champagne could boast about the possibility of Canada being the first country to introduce AI regulation legislation.


