Ontario pre-election budget promises new spending, multi-year deficits
TORONTO — As it braces to fight for re-election this spring, Ontario’s Liberal government has rolled out a spending package that targets nearly every demographic while plunging the province back into deficit, with the books expected to stay in the red for six years.
The 2018-2019 budget, tabled Wednesday by Finance Minister Charles Sousa, pumps billions into health care, child care, and support for seniors, though many of the spending promises had been announced by Premier Kathleen Wynne in recent days.
The $158.5-billion fiscal plan — the Liberals’ election platform for the June vote — projects the province will run a $6.7-billion deficit in 2018-2019 and won’t return to balance until 2024-2025.
Last year, the government posted its first balanced budget in a decade, and vowed to stay in the black through 2019-2020, although two fiscal watchdogs — the province’s auditor general and financial accountability officer — had raised questions about its accounting practices.