Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau, Ministers Fan Out Across Country To Promote Liberals' Maiden Budget

Darpan News Desk, 23 Mar, 2016 12:12 PM
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau says his government's maiden budget keeps faith with Canadians who voted for the Liberals in last fall's election, even though it breaks a central campaign promise to run up "modest" deficits.
     
    Kicking off a promotional blitz Wednesday to sell the big-spending budget, the prime minister insisted it delivers on the promise to revive the stagnant economy.
     
    "That was a very clear commitment we made and that's exactly what we've done," he told CBC radio's Ottawa morning show.
     
    The Liberals promised to run up deficits of no more than $10 billion a year before returning to balance in the fourth year of their mandate.
     
    Instead, Tuesday's budget projects $113.2 billion in red ink over the next five years, including a $29.4-billion deficit in 2016-17, $29 billion the following year and almost $23 billion in 2018-19. It does not specify a date for returning to balance.
     
    But Trudeau disputed suggestions that he's broken a core campaign vow, saying it's "not true" that his government will pile up a deficit three times larger than promised.
     
    "The promise I made was to invest in the future of this country. That's what Canadians told me we needed and we were going to do it responsibly and that's exactly what we've done," he said.
     
     
    "Unlike what the Conservatives have been doing ... trying to cut our way to prosperity, we know we need to invest to get to prosperity. Canadians understand that. That's exactly what they voted for."
     
    The budget details $11 billion in new spending on everything from Indigenous Peoples to post-secondary education, middle and modest income families, municipal infrastructure, the recently unemployed, veterans and seniors.
     
    Trudeau said that economic conditions have deteriorated since the platform was crafted, which only reinforced his belief that investments were needed to spur growth.
     
    With interest rates at a record low and Canada's debt to GDP ratio the lowest among G7 countries, Trudeau argued it's the perfect time to make investments aimed at getting the economy moving again. Indeed, he said he had a responsibility to do so.
     
    He said the budget puts the government on track to return to balance by the fifth year but warned that "depends entirely" on economic growth.
     
    In a separate interview with Radio-Canada's Ottawa-Gatineau morning show, Trudeau argued that the objective of the budget was not "to reach some mathematical balance" but to give "optimism and trust" to Canadians.
     
    "This is not a mathematical equation; it is money invested in people's lives that will have a positive impact, real impact, in their lives. And that is a good thing because people need this."
     
     
    Despite the big spending, the budget also delayed or reneged on some campaign promises, including putting off some investments in infrastructure to later years.
     
    Trudeau told Global BC's morning show that was simply a recognition that major infrastructure projects like public transit "aren't ready to get built starting next week." The government is still committed to pouring $60 billion in new spending into infrastructure over 10 years, he said, but wants to ensure it spends the money wisely on projects that will create long-term growth.
     
    Trudeau's series of radio and TV interviews Wednesday launched  a full court press to sell the budget.
     
    His cabinet ministers, meanwhile, fanned out across the country to highlight various aspects of the big-spending budget.
     
    Finance Minister Bill Morneau defended the government's budget as a way to promote economic growth over the long term with a focus on benefits for the country's middle class.
     
    "At the core is the notion when you have an economy that works for the middle class you have a country that works for everyone," Morneau said at a breakfast speech in Ottawa.
     
    He highlighted a boost to child care benefits and increases to post-secondary education grants as a means to that end. Morneau also reinforced the government's pledge to end boil-water advisories that plague aboriginal communities throughout the country as part of the budget's plan to give $8.4 billion to indigenous peoples over the next five years.
     
    Treasury Board president Scott Brison, Economic Development Minister Navdeep Bains, Immigration Minister John McCallum and Transport Minister Marc Garneau were also to be deployed Wednesday to tout the budget across the country.
     
    On Thursday, Small Business Minister Bardish Chagger, Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr and Infrastructure Minister Amarjeet Sohi will do the same.
     
    But if initial reaction is any gauge, the budget may not need a hard sell. With billions in spending splashed around, the budget appeared to satisfy many constituencies.
     
     
    Dozens of stakeholder groups gathered on Parliament Hill to provide budget reaction Tuesday offered an unusual consensus in lauding the Liberal efforts.
     
    And the sharpest critics left the big-spending budget comfortably parked in the "Goldilocks" zone between too hot and too cold.
     
    The Canadian Taxpayers Federation offered a withering review of Morneau's string of deficits and the absence of any timetable for a return to balance.
     
    "If this government held a contest to pick a title for this budget, the winner would probably be 'Spendy McDebtface,'" said the tax lobby group's director, Aaron Wudrick.
     
    But the left-leaning Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives took Morneau to task for spending too little, noting next year's deficit amounts to just 1.5 per cent of GDP, smaller than any federal deficit run between 1974 and 1996.
     
     
    "The Liberals are spending in the right places, but the amounts aren't up to the task," said the think-tank's senior economist, David Macdonald. "The deficit is too small to really tackle Canada's biggest economic challenges: unemployment and slow growth."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Police Pursuit Through Five Communities Nets Two Suspects In West Vancouver

    Surrey Police Pursuit Through Five Communities Nets Two Suspects In West Vancouver
    Surrey RCMP say that at about 1 a.m. on Thursday patrol officers noticed two people in a 2000 Honda Civic stolen from Port Coquitlam.  

    Surrey Police Pursuit Through Five Communities Nets Two Suspects In West Vancouver

    Thomas McDonald, Two-Time Murderer Who Escaped Justice For 30 Years Declared Dangerous Offender

    Thomas McDonald, Two-Time Murderer Who Escaped Justice For 30 Years Declared Dangerous Offender
    Thomas McDonald, 64, will serve an indeterminate prison sentence after he confessed during a so-called sting operation to carrying out a fatal 1981 shooting in Dawson Creek B.C.

    Thomas McDonald, Two-Time Murderer Who Escaped Justice For 30 Years Declared Dangerous Offender

    State Memorial Service Sunday For Calgary MLA Manmeet Bhullar Killed While Helping Motorist

    State Memorial Service Sunday For Calgary MLA Manmeet Bhullar Killed While Helping Motorist
    Manmeet Bhullar, who represented the riding of Calgary-Greenway, was on his way to Edmonton from Calgary on Monday afternoon.

    State Memorial Service Sunday For Calgary MLA Manmeet Bhullar Killed While Helping Motorist

    Shoppers Vent Online After Best Buy Canada Site Malfunctions On Black Friday

    Shoppers Vent Online After Best Buy Canada Site Malfunctions On Black Friday
    The online backlash against Best Buy Canada began shortly after the company tweeted Thursday night that its Black Friday sales were in effect.

    Shoppers Vent Online After Best Buy Canada Site Malfunctions On Black Friday

    Nanaimo, B.C., Man Nearly Loses Thousands Of Dollars In iTunes Scam

    Nanaimo, B.C., Man Nearly Loses Thousands Of Dollars In iTunes Scam
    RCMP say the man received an email that appeared to be from Apple iTunes listing several transactions on his account, and asking him to click on a link if the charges were incorrect or fraudulent.

    Nanaimo, B.C., Man Nearly Loses Thousands Of Dollars In iTunes Scam

    Ontario Businessman Jim Estill Sponsoring 50 Syrian Families; Rallies Town To Welcome Them

    Ontario Businessman Jim Estill  Sponsoring 50 Syrian Families; Rallies Town To Welcome Them
    Jim Estill says he's spending at least $1.5 million to privately sponsor the families and help them settle in the southern Ontario city of Guelph.

    Ontario Businessman Jim Estill Sponsoring 50 Syrian Families; Rallies Town To Welcome Them