The theme seems to be “reduce operating spending, increase capital spending”. We’ll see how that will blow over with the opposition.

    • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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      15 hours ago

      Also, guess who will pay less taxes, and who will foot the bill?

      Less taxes for the richies and the corpos. Service cuts for everyday Canadians.

  • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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    I don’t love everything in there but overall, seems a pretty fair mix of “dealing with the American shitstorm”, helping the economy and hopefully getting us on a greener path. Yes, there are parts I’d like more of and otherd of which I’d like less but in terms of a broad compromise that I think is reasonable to a large swathe of Canadians, I’m a pretty big fan.

    • Nils@lemmy.ca
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      dealing with the American shitstorm
      getting us on a greener path

      Can you clarify your position or share the article you read? I might have missed those points when I read the https://www.budget.canada.ca/ report

      there are parts I’d like more of and otherd of which I’d like less
      broad compromise that I think is reasonable to a large swathe of Canadians,

      A bit vague no? What do you mean?

      Thanks.

      • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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        2 days ago

        Those are two very different parts. Dealing with the American shitstorm is approached with enhanced trade routes etc. You might look at the broad overview here: https://budget.canada.ca/2025/report-rapport/chap1-en.html

        On the greener path, sure, there’s a new nuclear plant, carbon capture (not my ideal but probably a reasonable compromise with our oil dependent provinces) Wind West Atlantic and of course, holding onto the industrial carbon price. (The only realistic non Liberal government would be the Conservatives who have been opposed to that since inception.)

        there are parts I’d like more of

        If I had my magic wand, I’d probably like more green projects, probably some higher wealth taxes though disentangling those from capital investment is tricky etc. I’d also like to keep expanding the national daycare program.

        other[s] of which I’d like less

        Personally, I’m not entirely sold on a massive military budget buuuuuuuuut, I’m not wildly opposed. There are a few tax cuts that I think are a little silly (luxury jets seems fucking dumb. I hope they catch that somewhere else) and frankly, I didn’t love the gigantic tax cut at the beginning, though I’m in a pretty privileged position etc.

        • Nils@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          I understand better your points now, thanks for sharing your thoughts and optimism, I needed some optimism.

          When I first read the report on budge.canada the “greener path” shows that pretty much everything ended in 2024. Moving forward they mention carbon capture without details what kind of investment they are putting money in (best I could find is funding this https://www.alberta.ca/carbon-capture-and-storage that is also a bit vague), investing in mining (justifying that mining specific minerals helps the environment, but no mention on how to make mining less damaging to the environment and hold companies accountable) and removing the carbon cap saying that investments in several sectors would reduce the emissions anyway. A lot of wishful thinking on the budget text, or on the worst case mental gymnastics malice.

          Like, there is this promising

          To finance government spending that helps industrial and agricultural sectors get cleaner and more competitive, …

          I would love to see the government working with farmers to keep production high and with low footprint. Despite the text being vague on how/who will get the money, farmers are already very thin on their footprint, usually limited to the access of resources to maintain their farms (heat, fertilizers, etc…). A farmer that only has access to gas for heat would not be able to reduce their footprint unless other options are made available.

          I also felt like there is no handling “american shitstorm” either, there are plenty of brags on how they capitulate and are one of the least impacted by tariffs because of that.

          Also, good thing you bought up the taxes. One thing I found interesting while reading the PDF version earlier, they pretty much teach us on many ways to avoid paying them, I wish that was easily available at the CRA website. =P

          • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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            17 hours ago

            removing the carbon cap saying that investments in several sectors would reduce the emissions anyway. A lot of wishful thinking on the budget text, or on the worst case mental gymnastics malice.

            A lot of this is through keeping and raising a carbon tax. That makes companies find the most efficient ways to reduce their footprints, rather than the government mandating it for each group. This is the approach favoured by most serious economists and think groups about reducing emissions quickly.

            without details what kind of investment they are putting money in

            You can look at the “nation building” projects, which include a massive wind farm (green as hell) and a nuclear plant (fairly clean, significantly better than say, oil or gas.)

    • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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      2 days ago

      Which services are you thinking of?

      The major thing I’ve seen is reducing the number of public sector employees back to 2020 levels, which doesn’t seem wild. (I haven’t seen a good explanation of why we needed to increase the public sector by 20% since then, nor of what we got out of that. If you have anything, I’d love to read it!) Throw in some reductions of outside consultants etc…

      There are undoubtedly some programs getting cut. But given we’re teetering on the edge of an adversary induced recession, that doesn’t seem unsreasonable.

      • Nouveau_Burnswick@lemmy.world
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        Generally speaking, reducing public servants increases consultancy requirements, not reduces.

        If you don’t have someone with the capabilites/skills/corporate knowledge/experince/capacity to do X thing on the payroll, then you need to hire a consultant to do it.

        Now obviously I couldn’t tell you what ministry/department/etc needs, but let’s take the Alto contract as an isolated example.

        We don’t have any rail expertise in government at all, so we need to consult it in, and we pay a premium for that. In the lens of a single rail project, that makes a a lot of sense, we aren’t paying payroll and maintaining expertise for a once in a generation project.

        The alternative is having something like a national rail crown corp or department, like SNCF in France. Now all the experience is at the national level whenever you need it. SNCF has a lot more staff, planning, and engineering capacity than it requires; so that gets farmed out to regions and municipalities to help them with their rail/metro/tram projects. This is instead of each of them needing consultants, driving up the costs for municipal governments/capital projects.

        In this manner increased federal spending becomes an accelerant for other levels of government and reduces regional and municipal spending, and thus the overall tax burden for everyone.

        So if we had something like SNCF then the Alto project might cost a little more, but the Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Ottawa, Toronto, and Montréal recent/ongoing lines would be cheaper; plus medium cities like Victoria, Winnipeg, Québec City, and Halifax would have rail projects in their reach; and smaller cities like Red Deer, Regina, Thunder Bay, Kingston, Trois Rivières, and Fredericton would have tram projects in their reach.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        (I haven’t seen a good explanation of why we needed to increase the public sector by 20% since then, nor of what we got out of that. If you have anything, I’d love to read it!)

        Here’s an easy explanation: we didn’t have enough.

        Wait times are no fun, right? Need more people to process the things, or you need to remove some of the regulatory steps involved. Both those, the doing of the work and the fruitless “just make it faster” boondoggles, need meatbags to do the doing.

        You now how we can tell we didn’t have enough? WAIT TIMES. When it’s zero, you may have too many staff. When it’s a day, you’re probably just right. Show me a wait time report and I’ll show you 12 months in processing delays that we should have avoided by grabbing an intelligent peon and making them do some things of the things that need doing – because processing delays and wait times are absolutely the shits right now.

        QED

        • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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          To each their own.

          Edit: removed personal details.

          If you know anyone who works in government or a quasi governmental agency, they will tell you horror stories of colleagues who couldn’t be removed but couldn’t be arsed to do anything over the bare minimum (like being sober, showing up and handling at least one file a day.)

          There has to be something in between the nihilistic conservative “burn it all down, no more bureaucracy!” and the opposite “every government employee is sacred!” I think a slow reduction through attrition and buyouts seems pretty reasonable and gives enough time to actually find efficiencies and innovations.

          • Kindness is Punk@lemmy.ca
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            The fundamental flaw is equating corporate efficiency with public effectiveness. A company’s goal is shareholder returns, so it serves profitable customers and abandons the rest. We see this taken to its extreme with certain venture capital and private equity firms: they can buy a company, burden it with the debt used for its own acquisition, extract massive fees and dividends, and leave it a hollowed out shell. When it collapses, the architects of that failure are shielded from the consequences.

            A government’s mission is the opposite: to serve everyone, especially the vulnerable. Applying this profit extraction model to public service doesn’t eliminate costs it just shifts them, following the destructive maxim of ‘privatize the profits, socialize the costs.’ For a corporation, this might be a successful short-term play. But for a government it’s long-term ruin

            • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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              Applying this profit extraction model to public service

              Getting back to 2019 spending levels over a few years is hardly hollowing out the government.

              And what that freed up money is doing is investing in stuff that makes those services work better.

              For example in healthcare, which is hanging on by a thread, I think a few billion are going to building and renovating hospitals and investing in a new medical school. Those all make the services more efficient and sustainable in the long run.

              Edit: My goodness, the cuts are something like 13 billion out of a 500 billion budget.

                • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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                  13 hours ago

                  They’re cutting 13 billion. 51 billion (over 10 years) is going to local infrastucture; housing, roads, health and sanitation facilities.

                  Yes, military got more (~82 billion) and I don’t love that. Though, one part I do love is that a chunk of that military is also dual use, so climate emergencies like wildfires, floods etc.

        • bookmeat@lemmynsfw.com
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          Exactly, Canadian population growth is outstripping service supply and has been for some time. I still have a coworker who thinks the CRA personnel should be cut to the proportions the USA has, as if that’s a benchmark to aspire to.

      • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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        I don’t have anything in particular, as I haven’t seen details, but the public service exists to serve the public, cutting the workforce ends up reducing services. Since we’re on the edge of a recession I’d say tax the billionaires, go back and charge Google for the billions that we were supposed to get before Carney bowed down to trump. We will now also have many unemployed more unemployed people which causes strains in other areas. I remain unconvinced that cuts for austerity purposes are ultimately beneficial, raise taxes on the ultra wealthy instead

        • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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          the public service exists to serve the public, cutting the workforce ends up reducing services.

          But what services did we get with our ridiculous expansion of the public service over the last four years?

          charge Google for the billions that we were supposed to get before Carney bowed down to trump.

          If memory serves, the tax in total, wad supposed to bring in 2 billion. We are paying an order of magnitude more than that to deal with tarrifs affected industries. It seems pretty reasonable to assume something that hits trump’s donors so precisely would elicit a reaction that would cost us much more than we brought in.

          I’d say tax the billionaires

          Sure, I’d like to as well. But there are I think less than 100 billionaires in Canada. Say we could soak them for even another 100 million a year each (which would be extraordinary and almost require some wild changes to the tax code because of the nature of their wealth, but let’s put those complications to the side.) Groovy. Until what, 1 in 10 decide it’s worth that 100 million plus the existing difference to move to the States or elsewhere. It’s a tricky balance and I’ve yet to see any of our populist “just tax the rich!” really show their math.

          Edit: finished my thought after clicking accidentally.

          • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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            But what services did we get with our ridiculous expansion of the public service over the last four years?

            Lets see what we miss out on if this budget passes.

            If memory serves, the tax in total, wad supposed to bring in 2 billion. We are paying an order of magnitude more than that to deal with tarrifs affected industries. It seems pretty reasonable to assume something that hits trump’s donors so precisely would elicit a reaction that would cost us much more than we brought in.

            Great that’s 2 billion we left on the table. We are paying more, but guess what bowing down to trump has left us where exactly? Are we just supposed to keep bending over for trump and his cronies? Fucking nationalize shit if they play that game.

            Sure, I’d like to as well. But there are I think less than 100 billionaires in Canada. Say we could soak them for even another 100 million a year each. Groovy. Until what, 1 in 10 decide it’s worth that 100 million plus the existing difference to move to the States or elsewhere. Its

            Good riddance they are a plague. Make them pay their taxes before they leave. They don’t bring in anything, they cost us. We subsidize their businesses, think O&G. We burn the planet so they can have another yacht, that they got through tax loopholes. Fuck them

            • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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              17 hours ago

              Good riddance they are a plague. Make them pay their taxes before they leave.

              Ummm, did you forget you propsed they would be the solution to our budget woes? Or are you not old enough to pay taxes and don’t realize we do those on an annual basis? (Putting aside the fact that most billionaires don’t earn it on taxed wages but more that they own unsold stock.)

              We are paying more, but guess what bowing down to trump has left us where exactly?

              One of the best tarrif rates in the world?

              Fucking nationalize shit if they play that game.

              Dafuq? You’re saying nationalize google?

              Jesus though, this is why it can be so hard to take progressives seriously. This is just mindless slogan yelling with zero thought.

              • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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                Ummm, did you forget you propsed they would be the solution to our budget woes? Or are you not old enough to pay taxes and don’t realize we do those on an annual basis? (Putting aside the fact that most billionaires don’t earn it on taxed wages but more that they own unsold stock.)

                I never said they would be the sole solution lol. I’m old enough to pay taxes and I’m pissed that my tax dollars subsidize them, you should be too. There are businesses that get crazy tax breaks that we should take back, spend taxes on the population not the ultra wealthy. Yes close the fucking loopholes.

                One of the best tarrif rates in the world?

                I’d rather not be kissing his ass at all.

                Dafuq? You’re saying nationalize google

                The infrastructure yes, but Google won’t leave Canada if we enforce our laws because there are millions of Canadians and they would still make criminal amounts of money.

                Jesus though, this is why it can be so hard to take progressives seriously. This is just mindless slogan yelling with zero thought.

                And this is why it’s so hard to take centrists seriously, this is just mindless asskissing and excuse making to keep getting bent further and further over the barrel. We keep this up and you will own nothing and be happy for it, with no rights, no privacy, living in a corporate town using musk bucks to buy your Microsoft verification cans.

                • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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                  15 hours ago

                  I remain unconvinced that cuts for austerity purposes are ultimately beneficial, raise taxes on the ultra wealthy instead

                  never said they would be the sole solution lol.

                  Okay, so if we’re admitting your first plan of tax the wealthy is a little myopic here, which tax breaks are you considering removing? And how will this stop those businesses from instead, setting up shop in a lower tax, lower regulation, larger single market like Americas?

                  I’d rather not be kissing his ass at all.

                  How many people should lose their jobs because of your sense of pride? Just curious.

                  Google won’t leave Canada if we enforce our laws because there are millions of Canadians and they would still make criminal amounts of money.

                  Read what I wrote about the digital services tax. The concern was not that Google would leave.

                  And this is why it’s so hard to take centrists seriously

                  He just descends into mindless sloganning again. Everything I’ve said can be backed up, whereas your thoughts aren’t even consistent in this single thread!

            • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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              17 hours ago

              Okay, but the person to whom I’m responding wanted to save money by taxing them. So, what services would you cut to be rid of the people who are paying for those services?

              • patatas@sh.itjust.works
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                The problem with the existence of billionaires is really the wealth inequality itself, not the number of dollars in their bank accounts.

                Inequality is what gives the ultra-wealthy their outsized influence in the political economy.

                Dollars are not scarce items; the government can issue currency essentially at will. Taxes aren’t there to fund services. They exist to reduce inequality.

                So yes, tax the billionaires. And if they leave: we’re better off that way too!

                • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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                  15 hours ago

                  Sorry, I seriously disagree with about all of this.

                  Inequality is what gives the ultra-wealthy their outsized influence in the political economy.

                  This is about Canadian politics. We have strict rules and limits on donations, advertising and support. Like anything, could probably be better but it’s a pretty fair balance.

                  the government can issue currency essentially at will.

                  Apologies but this is childishly ignorant. Look to most countries in South America about the consequences of doing so. Inflation is very real and reducing the value of the Canadian dollar hurts those who can afford it least.

                  Taxes aren’t there to fund services. They exist to reduce inequality.

                  Absolutely not. Being equally poor without teachers, doctors, roads, defence, I mean my God.

                  tax the billionaires

                  We do. You let me know how much you think we do currently, how much more you would like.

                  And if they leave: we’re better off that way too!

                  Who needs hospitals, schools, emergency responders etc anyway? At least we won’t have dumb ol’ rich people anymore!

  • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    The budget was designed to pass.

    That means that it was pathetically compromising towards environmental protections, worker protections, a strong stance against the US, etc., etc.

    In other words, it’s pretty much a fucking milquetoast mess with nothing good.

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    2 days ago

    Yves-François Blanchet gave quite a speech about it, the gist of it was that he doesn’t like it. This may be a budget that fails to pass.

    • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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      I think the Bloc has been adamantly opposed for months.

      Possibly foolishly optimistic take incoming:

      My guess/ferverent hope is that the NDP and Cons don’t want another election so soon. The NDP can’t afford it and I think the Conservatives wouldn’t love the optics. There’s also so much in there about protecting the Ontario areas where the Conservatives just made inroads + everyone still hates PP, you have to think an election would be a loser for them.

      So, bold prediction/prayer, Cons n NDP allow a free vote with abstentions so they don’t have to vote for it but also don’t have to trigger an election.

      • LoveCanada@lemmy.ca
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        I think its more likely the NDP just abstain enough that it passes. And apparently there is a member crossing the floor today from the Cons to the Libs so they only need a few abstentions to pass. I dont think the Cons will to abstain because of the optics.

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        Conservatives are requiring electronic votes for travelling MPs as far as I understand, so there’s very few excuses to “accidentally” abstain. However, one has already crossed the floor, and more are to come. If the Liberals don’t get a majority then I’m sure enough NDP are going to abstain for it to pass.

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          16 hours ago

          Yeah, I really wonder if it’ll be a whipped vote. Part of me wonders if that’s why whats-his-name crossed the floor. If they let it be a free vote, then anyone can abstain as they see fit.

          Probably have to wait and see some polling on the budget but from casual conversations/reactions, it seems pretty rocking.

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        Yeah I think some Conservatives abstaining is the most likely path. Much as they’d like to I don’t think the NDP (or Elizabeth May) are going to want to be seen as enabling it.

        If the Conservatives don’t make it happen, their party may just get its own chance to fail to pass their first budget very soon.

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          If the Conservatives don’t make it happen, their party may just get its own chance to fail to pass their first budget very soon.

          Ha, well put.

          We’ll see how it all shakes out but if I were the Liberals, I think I’d be itching for this fight and a pretty good chance at taking a majority government.

          Maybe I’m discounting partisanship, but I can’t imagine Canadians would be happy about another election with America attacking us. (Also, while obviously sample size/anecodatal doesn’t count etc my 2 angry Conservative friends seemed pretty content with the budget.)

          • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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            The last month or so haven’t been good for Mark’s electability. He should really lay low a bit until the attack ad potential dies down. I’d hate to see more morons choosing Milhouse.

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              16 hours ago

              Honestly, I wonder how much of that last election loss was just we hated that guy so much. If I remember correctly, there was a yawning chasm between “approval for the Conservative party” and “approval for Poilievre.”

              But, there’s so much in this budget for almost everyone that last month aside, I’d still happily put Carney out there blasting Conservatives for wasting Canadians time etc. But we’ll see how it all plays out!

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      It’s their jobnot to like it, ask for more for QC, get something, then begrudgingly vote in favour.