Public sector union warns Carney against reducing government staff to cut spending
Sharon DeSousa, national president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC), said Prime Minister Mark Carney should stick with his campaign promise to 'cap' the federal public service — not cut it.
However, Carney's senior-most minister this week directed cabinet to find a total of 15 per cent in spending cuts in their departments by 2028-29. The direction from Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne spelled out cuts of 7.5 per cent by 2026–27, an additional 2.5 per cent cut by 2027–28, and another five per cent on top of that by 2028–29. The target will amount to $25 billion, a government official confirmed to National Post.
Any cuts to staff, said DeSousa, will have consequences.
'What it actually means is that you're looking to cut jobs, which means cutting services — end of story,' DeSousa said. 'It will mean longer wait times. It means that we're not going to be able to deliver on the programs that are a priority to us, and I think everyone is going to be impacted.'
'What we're talking about is employment insurance. We're talking about veterans who are looking for services. We're talking about an aging population who is looking to get guidance as to how to receive their benefits. It's going to impact people looking for passports.'
'There's not one area that's not going to be affected,' she added.
Mohammad Kamal, director of communications to the President of the Treasury Board, did said the government's spending review is requesting that all departments 'bring forward savings proposals by targeting programs and activities that are underperforming, not core to the federal mandate, duplicative, or misaligned with government priorities.'
There are exceptions, however: the Department of National Defence, the Canada Border Services Agency and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police will be subject to a 'lower savings target' of two per cent over those three years, said Kamal.
The process does not apply to agents of Parliament — such as the auditor general and the parliamentary budget officer, the courts administration service and the office of the registrar of the Supreme Court of Canada — to 'preserve their independence,' he said.
Anxiety among federal public servants is reportedly already high. DeSousa said 10,000 jobs were cut just last year, and an estimated 2,000 to 7,000 more jobs could be on the chopping block for this year as well. That includes contracts at the Canada Revenue Agency, as well as the departments of employment and immigration that are not being renewed, she said.
'Right now, if you try to call Canada Revenue Agency, less than five per cent of the calls are being picked up. They don't have enough people to do this,' she claimed.
While the government has vowed to not touch transfers to individuals and provinces, or social programs such as child care and dental care, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak warned Indigenous services should be exempt from the cuts as well.
'I think health care for Canadians and Indian Affairs should never be cut back,' said Woodhouse Nepinak in an interview. 'And I think because the gaps are so huge, you don't want to further and widen the gap on First Nations people by cutting services and programs very much needed to make this country be a better place.'
DeSousa said the government can look at different ways of finding efficiencies in delivering services to Canadians while still redirecting money to the government's core priorities.
'There's a different way that we can do this. It doesn't have to be done like previous administrations, where it starts off with just this lazy approach of austerity and cutting jobs… I don't think it needs to be at the expense of people who rely on those services.'
DeSousa suggested reducing the amount departments and agencies spend on outside consultants, which would save millions of dollars each year, but also reverse the return-to-office mandate to free up buildings so they can be repurposed for other initiatives, such as low-income housing, or sold to generate potentially billions of dollars in savings.
'What we're trying to do is to provide practical solutions that the government can, in fact, look at so that it doesn't make the sacrifices on the programs and services, and to get them to understand the actual impact their decision-making is going to have, and how it's going to affect people residing in Canada who depend on them,' she said.
'For us, it's about fighting for their services.'
National Post calevesque@postmedia.com
Finance minister directs cabinet colleagues to find billions in spending cuts
Carney says deadline for new deal with U.S. delayed as Trump threatens 35% tariffs on Canada
Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
3 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Anand says Indo-Pacific strategy will have economic focus but maintain values
OTTAWA - Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says the economy is becoming the primary focus of Canada's relationships in the Indo-Pacific — a shift that appears linked to Canada's recent moves to overcome its security dispute with India. Anand was in Japan and Malaysia this week for her first trip to the region since taking over as foreign minister in May. Her message coming out of that trip was that Canada's foreign policy is shifting — though not abandoning — the priorities set by the previous Liberal government of former prime minister Justin Trudeau. 'It is important for us to revisit our policy — not only in the Indo-Pacific but generally speaking — to ensure that we are focusing not only on the values that we have historically adhered to,' Anand said Thursday in a teleconference from Malaysia. 'Foreign policy is an extension of domestic interest and particularly domestic economic interests. This is a time when the global economy is under stress.' The Trudeau government put language on environmental protection, labour standards and gender equality in its trade agreements. Goldy Hyder, head of the Business Council of Canada, said that made Canada appear 'a bit preachy' to other countries. He said Canada has to be respectful in the way it stands up for democratic values. A focus on the economy is quickly becoming a defining trait of the government of Prime Minister Mark Carney, a former central banker who is intent on building up Canada's domestic capacity and reshaping its trade and security plans to rely less on the United States. Carney has been mostly focused on Europe so far; he has visited the continent three times since March. Anand's visit this week 'sets the stage' for Carney's planned visits this fall to the Association of South East Asian Nations leaders' summit in Malaysia and the APEC forum in South Korea, said Vina Nadjibulla, research vice-president for the Asia Pacific Foundation. Anand visited Tokyo to sign an information-sharing agreement that could lead to defence procurement deals, before heading to Malaysia for a meeting of the Association of South East Asian Nations, or ASEAN. Her visit also comes as Canada tries to restore ties with India after two years of diplomatic chill following the 2023 shooting death of Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar near Vancouver — a crime Ottawa linked to agents of the Indian government. The RCMP said last year it had evidence of New Delhi playing a role in acts of homicide, coercion and extortion targeting multiple Sikh-Canadians. Canada subsequently expelled six senior Indian diplomats; New Delhi expelled six Canadian diplomats in response. India claims Canada is enabling a separatist movement that calls for a Sikh homeland — Khalistan — to be carved out of India, and calls that a violation of its sovereignty. Carney began to thaw the relationship in June. He invited Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the G7 summit in Alberta and the two leaders agreed to reinstate their high commissioners. The two countries are also starting security talks. As the world's most populous country, India is seen as a critical partner as Carney pushes to disentangle Canada from its heavy reliance on trade with the U.S. The two countries have engaged in on-and-off negotiations on a trade deal since 2010, with frequent pauses — including Ottawa's suspension of talks after the Nijjar assassination. Hyder said India's corporate sector has been urging Canadian corporations to continue expanding trade in spite of the tensions between Ottawa and New Delhi. 'One day this is all going to be resolved, and we don't want to have lost all that time,' he said. He said the reduced number of Canadian diplomats has made it more challenging for members of his council to engage in India, because there are fewer trade commissioners in India to help Canadians connect companies with contacts and opportunities on the ground. Hyder, who spoke just before leaving for a fact-finding mission to India, said the appointment of high commissioners will set the tone for eventual trade talks. He said a trade deal would be helpful but is not 'a precondition' for boosting trade, and suggested Ottawa should focus on scaling up the roads and ports needed to meet Asia's demand for Canadian commodities. Vijay Sappani, a fellow with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, said an India trade deal could come quite soon. 'If we put in the right efforts on our end, I feel like we could probably get a free-trade agreement done before the end of this year, if not (the first quarter) of next year,' said Sappani. 'There is no Indo-Pacific without India, and if we want to play in the global markets, where we've been kind of shunned … then we need to step up to the plate.' Sappani said Ottawa should seek assurances from India that it will never play a role in violence in Canada. In turn, he said, Ottawa could commit to not having politicians show up at any event where there are displays commemorating those who took part in violence in support of the Khalistan movement. 'That is the biggest thing that we Canadians can do to stop some level of irritants within the Indian side, and trade definitely will come on back on the table,' he said. Anand would not say how soon Canada and India could appoint top envoys, or start trade talks. 'We will take the relationship with India one step at a time,' she said Thursday. 'That timeline will be steady, not immediate.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 12, 2025.


Washington Post
3 hours ago
- Washington Post
Why this fashionable corporate concept doesn't work
Liberal precincts of American society tried various idealistic social experiments during the past decade. Universities went 'test-optional' (on the theory that standardized testing helped the privileged), cities cut funding for police (on the theory that there were better ways to control crime), and businesses embraced 'stakeholder capitalism' (on the theory that maximizing value for shareholders was bad for society at large).
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Website, business name-slanging in election campaign
Liberal and Labor leaders have traded barbs over a website address and a signature policy business name as Tasmania's election campaign enters its final week. The island state is heading to the polls on July 19, some six weeks after minority Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff lost a vote of no-confidence in parliament. The Liberals, who have been in power since 2014, have governed in minority since 2023 with voter surveys pointing to another hung parliament. Former Labor premier Paul Lennon has thrown a spanner in the works of the Liberals by registering the business name TasInsure. TasInsure is the Liberals' self-described signature campaign pledge to create a state-owned insurer. The Liberals returned serve somewhat, setting up a website at after the Labor-named pledge to create five government-run bulk-billed GP clinics. Mr Rockliff, whose party has committed to matching Labor's TassieDoc plan, denied his party was playing political games. "(The website) is simply explaining a policy," he told reporters on Saturday. Mr Lennon told The Australian he registered TasInsure to expose the fact it wasn't a serious proposal. Labor leader Dean Winter said he wasn't concerned about the Liberals claiming because information would be available on official health channels if he was elected. He said Mr Rockliff had gone to the trouble of making TasInsure merchandise without providing costs or any modelling about why the proposal stacks up. "What Jeremy Rockliff has been doing is running around with hats and posters telling people about policy that has no detail to it," Mr Winter said. The no-confidence motion against Mr Rockliff, put forward by Labor and supported by the Greens and three crossbench members, was critical of his budget management. Tasmania's net debt is set to more than double to almost $11 billion in 2028/29, according to the most recent budget. An increased number of voters have already made up their minds ahead of the election, Tasmania's second in two years and fourth in seven years. Almost 54,000 people have cast pre-poll votes heading into the final week of campaigning, more than double the 26,000 figure at the equivalent point in 2024. The Liberals hold 14 seats and Labor 10 in the state's 35-seat lower house.