Donald Trump, Davos and Mark Carney
Digest more
Trump told World Economic Forum attendees he would not use force to acquire Greenland, while talking up his ability to negotiate through tariff threats. "You can say yes, and we will be very appreciative, or you can say no and we will remember," Trump said in the hourlong Jan. 21 speech.
President Donald Trump delivered a rambling address to global leaders during the World Economic Forum in Davos.
President Donald Trump’s winding, antagonistic speech to business moguls and government officials in the Swiss Alps on Wednesday was hardly a salve to concerns the Western Alliance is at its breaking point.
President Trump said his plans for boosting home affordability are already helping, but stopped short of providing details.
Trump's seeking "immediate negotiations" to discuss the Danish territory.
In his speech at Davos, Trump made some easily disprovable claims about wind farms, among other things.
"They're not there for us on Iceland, that I can tell you," the president said in a remark that appeared to be about Greenland.
Trump, 79, said in the past tense that he “had” a great relationship with Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom when he “was” president during the Palisades Fire recovery in January 2025.
16hon MSN
Fact-checking Trump's Davos speech
The US president made a series of contested claims, ranging from the status of Greenland to Nato spending.
The U.S. president suggested Canada's prime minister should remember to be "grateful" for all the "freebies" America provides it.
The president gave misleading accounts of the U.S. role in Greenland’s history and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, among other claims.
Democrats are begging President Donald Trump’s Cabinet to “take the keys” away from him after his rambling, low-energy address to the World Economic Forum. “He said a lot of crazy s--t today,” Massachusetts Rep.