Poll Suggests Half of Canadians Have Negative Opinion of Latest Liberal Budget

Poll Suggests Half of Canadians Have Negative Opinion of Latest Liberal Budget
Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland waits for the start of a TV interview after tabling the federal budget on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on April 16, 2024. The Canadian Press/Justin Tang
The Canadian Press
Updated:
0:00

A new poll suggests the Liberals have not won over voters with their latest budget, though there is broad support for their plan to build millions of homes.

Just shy of half the respondents to Leger’s latest survey said they had a negative opinion of the federal budget, which was presented on April 16.

Only 21 percent said they had a positive opinion, and one-third of respondents said they didn’t know or preferred not to answer.

Still, 65 percent of those surveyed said the plan to spend $8.5 billion on housing, aimed at building 3.9 million homes by 2031, is good for the country.

Leger’s poll of 1,522 Canadians last weekend can’t be assigned a margin of error because online surveys are not considered truly random samples.

People in Alberta were most likely to say they had a very negative impression of the budget, with 42 percent selecting that option compared to 25 percent across the entire country.

More than half of the people who took the poll said they are in favour of the government’s plans to spend more on energy efficiency, national defence and student-loan forgiveness for health care and education workers.

And 56 percent said they think the increase to the capital gains tax inclusion rate—a move that’s estimated to raise another $19.4 billion in revenue over the next four years—is a good thing.

The Liberals are billing the change as critical to their plan to improve generational fairness by taxing the ultra-rich.

It has drawn criticism, including from the Canadian Medical Association, which warned on April 23 that it could affect the country’s ability to recruit and keep physicians.

The budget proposes to make two-thirds of capital gains—the profit made on the sale of assets—taxable, rather than half. For individuals, this would apply to profits above $250,000, but there is no lower threshold for corporations.

The medical association said many doctors will face higher taxes because they have incorporated their practices and used those companies to save for retirement.

While the Liberals are aiming changes to the capital gains tax at younger Canadians including millennials and gen-Zers, Leger’s poll found it had the support of 60 percent of respondents over the age of 55—the highest among any age group.

People between 18 and 35 were least likely to support the Liberal plan to spend another $73 billion on defence in the next two decades. Just 45 percent of respondents in that age group said ramping up defence spending is good for the country, compared with 70 percent of people over the age of 55.

Leger also asked questions about the country’s fiscal future.

Almost half the respondents, 47 percent, said they want to see the government cut back on spending and programs to get the budget balanced as quickly as possible.

Just 16 percent said spending more and running large deficits is the best plan for the next five years, and 14 percent want to see the government increase taxes to bring the deficit down.