Small on spending, Libs sell Budget 2017 as big on ideas for a changing world
OTTAWA — The federal government’s second budget Wednesday is expected to emphasize skills and job training, but will also illustrate lessons learned as Justin Trudeau’s Liberals move away from the sunny ways of 2015 and towards the hard truths of the next campaign.
The last time Finance Minister Bill Morneau went through this exercise, the Liberals were still all aglow from their election win; the ensuing budget read like a longer — and more expensive — version of their campaign platform.
Now, after a bruising year in government and a U.S. election that challenged assumptions around the world about how politics is supposed to work, the 2017 budget is expected to take a more cautious, steady-as-she-goes approach.
With lacklustre growth sill plaguing the Canadian economy and the tab for last year’s billions and billions of dollars worth of commitments looming large, the government has precious little room to introduce new spending.


