Liberals table first fiscal document in seven years that won’t need opposition votes
OTTAWA — The Liberal government released a spring economic update Tuesday closely focused on boosting investment and job training.
While the document contains measures that likely would face pushback from the opposition, the Liberals — thanks to their new parliamentary majority — won’t have to worry about securing opposition votes to pass it.
The thin document served mostly to provide a mid-year update on the government’s finances. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne boasted about ending the 2025-26 fiscal year with a deficit of $67 billion, compared with the $78 billion predicted by the federal budget last fall.
“I think what matters to Canadians today is that we have managed to lower the deficit, $11 billion, at a time where you would see in the world this kind of a fog of uncertainty which is clouding a lot of parts of the world,” he said. “And Canada, despite all that, has been able to, managed to, lower the deficit, and at the same time making sure we’re there for Canadians.”


