SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Canadian Political Free-for-All

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
From: russet9/19/2025 5:04:07 PM
1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

   of 37068
 
Only idiots would vote for this. There are a lot of idiot voters in Canada.

The Governor General’s closet: A queen’s dream and a taxpayers’ nightmare

Governor General Mary Simon is spending your money like it’s her personal fund for Buckingham Palace’s boutique.

The governor general dipped into her taxpayer piggy bank (a.k.a. your wallet) to fund her shoe collection — six new pairs in 12 months — and is even charging you for her undergarments.

You read that right. Apparently, hundreds of dollars in silk undergarments are now considered essential to public services.

Simon spent $330 of taxpayers’ money on silk camisoles, $1,117 on shoes, $875 on a single blazer, $1,500 on a “sealskin chest piece” and $2,510 on luxury wool suits during the last fiscal year.

Simon spent $144 on a “black dress cardigan.” The “value of the item” according to the expense sheet is half that, listed at only $72. Is there anything the government doesn’t go overbudget on?


It's very rare for any minister or prime minister to expense clothing. Only two ministers expensed apparel last year — each less than $300 for work boots for an event at a construction site.

Simon billed you for a total of $7,576 on shoes and clothing last year.

Simon’s annual salary is $378,000 a year. Let’s just say she doesn’t need to force you to pay for her clothes.


And that’s not all! Simon’s expansive wardrobe isn’t the only way the governor general’s office is draining the public purse.

Her lavish wardrobe is just the start of the spending spree. Since her appointment, she spent more than $120,000 on speech writers — and don’t get us started on her crazy travel expenses.

Simon has been enjoying mile-high catering — meals on airplanes include beef Wellington, carpaccio, stuffed pork tenderloin and hundreds of dollars on lemons, limes and bottled water. The list goes on.

Simon and her entourage billed you about $100,000 for airplane food during their week-long trip to the Middle East. A separate four-day trip to Germany totaled $103,000 in catering costs. She also spent hundreds of dollars on flowers to go along with the lavish meals.

All on your dime.

Oh, and the cost of those trips totalled $1 million and $700,000, respectively.

Simon also famously spent $71,000 at “Icelimo Luxury Travel” during a four-day trip to Iceland. The total bill for that trip cost taxpayers $298,000.

In fact, the governor general’s travel during her first year in office cost you almost $3 million.


Why is she even going on these far-flung excursions? The governor general’s role is to represent the monarchy here in Canada.

When was the last time you took your family on a vacation? Next time you agonize over fuel or air travel costs, remember you’re already footing the bill for an unelected figurehead’s opulent jet-setting.

The worst part of all this? The governor general’s flamboyant spending is all within rules laid out by the federal government.

Governors general can bill you up to $130,000 on clothes over their five-year term.

And all those posh clothes need cleaning, right? The governor general’s office spent $117,000 on professional dry-cleaning services since 2018, despite having staff dedicated to doing the laundry.

That works out to more than $1,800 per month spent on dry cleaning.

It’s time to close the royal boutique and stop treating taxpayers like an unlimited credit card.

Franco’s note: I just want to give a shout out to the great investigative news outlet, Blacklock’s Reporter. They were the first outlet to report on this spending. And that’s not the only big taxpayer story they uncovered this week. Check this one out: https://www.blacklocks.ca/d-e-i-spending-tops-1-04b/



Carney shrinks from pro-active cuts — lets bureaucrats retire themselves

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation called out Prime Minister Mark Carney for his lackadaisical approach to Ottawa’s bureaucracy.

Carney needs to cut staff, not just wait for them to retire.

Here’s the back story:

The federal bureaucracy ballooned disproportionately under the Trudeau Liberals. Carney’s predecessor added nearly 100,000 paper pushers during his decade-long tenure.

The federal bureaucracy cost taxpayers $71.1 billion in 2024-25 — a 77 per cent increase from the $40.2 billion expense in 2016-17.


Enter Mark Carney, armed with a plan … based on inaction and procrastination.

The prime minister said he’s directed federal departments and Crown corporations to cut up to 15 per cent of their budgets over the next few years. He also claimed he would “balance the operating budget by Budget 2028.”

That seemed like a promising start — until Carney announced the cuts would “happen naturally through attrition.”

The bureaucracy now consumes about 55 per cent of the operating budget. And quality of service is decreasing.

Half of Canadians think services are worse than in 2016, according to a Leger poll commissioned by the CTF. Only 11 per cent say they’re better — proving the bureaucracy isn’t shrinking, it’s suffocating.

The poll showed most Canadians want to see the federal bureaucracy cut.

We’ll keep fighting for real cuts — not just a slow march to retirement.



Video: Carney clueless about his own gun confiscation

Carney called his gun confiscation "voluntary."

Except the federal government announced a list of banned guns that many Canadians had stored in their homes.

Those firearms are suddenly illegal.


The Carney government plans to confiscate them in exchange for compensation. The penalty for illegal possession of a prohibited firearm under the Criminal Code is up to five years in jail.

And taxpayers like you are forced to pay those law-abiding Canadians after the government seizes their property.

“We’re not confiscating guns,” Carney said. “[It’s] an opportunity for Canadians to return guns for compensation.”

What does that mean? Taxpayers have questions.

The CTF’s Gage Haubrich and Kris Sims break it down in the video below and offer Carney an easy solution: scrap the gun ban and confiscation scheme.

Watch: taxpayer.us1.list-manage.com



Taxpayer reading list

If you’re looking for more reading on the issues, we’ve got you covered.

Carney must can the ban on gas and diesel vehicles: taxpayer.us1.list-manage.com

British Columbia must stop its debt spiral: taxpayer.us1.list-manage.com

Legault must scrap his partial rebate plan and eliminate the carbon tax: taxpayer.us1.list-manage.com

Taxpayers call for tax cuts and spending reduction as N.L. provincial election kicks off: taxpayer.us1.list-manage.com

Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext