OTTAWA—The cost of campaign promises came up for discussion on the campaign trail Wednesday, Sept. 16, ahead of a debate on the economy the following night.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper, NDP Leader Tom Mulcair, and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau had all converged on Calgary for the Thursday evening debate.
Trudeau told reporters his promises are all costed within a fiscal framework the party released weeks ago. That framework includes a proposal to run deficits for the next three years, in order to pay for a $60 billion infrastructure spending plan.
“The Liberal party was the first party to put out a complete fiscal framework and our opponents know that very well; they’ve been attacking us every single day,” said Trudeau.
“All of our commitments, every commitment we make and every announcement across this campaign, is not only fully costed, but fits into that detailed framework that we announced weeks ago, before any other party did.”
A panel of NDP candidates released the party’s proposed fiscal plan at a news conference in Ottawa on Wednesday, forecasting balanced budgets and surpluses in the years to come.
New Democrats say they will pay for platform items such as a national child-care program and more affordable housing through such measures as the elimination of income-splitting plan for families, cuts to fossil fuel subsidies, and raising the corporate income tax rate to 17 percent from 15 percent.
The party, which has never formed government federally, is trying to combat criticism that it is fundamentally ill-equipped to manage the economy, as well as ideologically incapable of being business-friendly.