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Political parties and their leaders fatherât ever feature a astral report for keeping their promises. This weekâs budget offers an opportunity to check on some of the things Prime Minister Mark Carney and his Liberal Party promised during the election campaign in the spring. Did they become reality?
We canât be comprehensive. There are parts of the budget that didnât start with specific campaign promises, and there were campaign promises that donât have budget implications.
But some things can be checked, and they include some of the biggest priorities of Carneyâs government.
After U.S. President Donald Trump imposed 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian-made vehicles on April 3, Carney announced retaliatory tariffs aimed specifically at the auto industry (by this time he was already prime minister, but the campaign was also underway). He promised that âevery single dollar raised from these tariffs will go directly to support our autoworkers.â
It appears the government has not yet lived up to the letter of that promise, although it left itself wiggle room in the budget. Itâs also complicated to measure because other retaliatory tariffs have been imposed, and help has been given to workers in other affected industries, such as in steel and aluminum.
In all, Canada has brought in $6.7 billion from counter-tariffs since Trump was elected.
Of that, $3 billion has been given back to companies and workers hit hardest by the trade war. That leaves $3.7 billion left over, so âevery single dollarâ hasnât been handed out, but Ottawa says it may still give out more as the U.S. Tariffs continue to bite.
Under intense pressure from Trump, the Liberals agreed during the campaign to increase Canadaâs defence spending to two per cent of GDP by 2030, a key amount that all NATO countries have pledged to meet. Canada, however, has not lived up to that commitment.
After winning the election, Carney agreed to increase the NATO commitment further (once again, under pressure from Trump) to five per cent of GDP (which includes 1.5 per cent for support infrastructure).
In the budget, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said Canada will meet the two per cent target this year, faster than the initial promise. Beyond that though, the budgetâs numbers arenât specific enough to figure out if the government is living up to its commitments. The defence section doesnât offer a year-by-year breakdown of spending, and no comparison to GDP is offered for the coming years.
During the spring, Carneyâs Liberal Party said it would get 500,000 homes built per year, doubling the current rate. It would do this by creating a new agency called Build Canada Homes, which would spend $10 billion on building affordable new homes, and loaning another $25 billion to developers.
The government created Build Canada Homes in September, and in this weekâs budget it dedicated $13 billion over five years to fund it, characterizing that as an âinitialâ investment.
But the government has scaled back its promise slightly. The budget says homebuilding will now ânearlyâ double, to between 430,000 and 480,000 homes per year.
Artificial intelligence has been called one of the biggest technological innovations in human history, and is being fuelled by staggering levels of investment from both private companies and national governments.
But the budget doesnât match what the Liberals promised to invest on the campaign trail.
Back then, Carney promised $2.5 billion invested in digital infrastructure like chips and data centres through the next two fiscal years, as well as $15,000 for workers in priority sectors to learn how to use AI.
However, the budget only pledges $925 million over five years for public AI infrastructure, $800 million of which is money already announced in last yearâs budget.
Otherwise, the federal government says it will try to attract private capital for AI investment but the details are vague.
AI minister denies that Canada needs to 'catch up' with global industry
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