Friday, May 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney's planned cuts will include the foreign service, alarming some ex-diplomats

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2025 10:03 AM
  • Carney's planned cuts will include the foreign service, alarming some ex-diplomats

Prime Minister Mark Carney's cuts to government spending will include the foreign service, just as Global Affairs Canada aims to expand its presence abroad.

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne sent letters to ministers on Monday asking them to find savings of 7.5 per cent in their budgets starting next spring.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says that will include Global Affairs Canada, adding that it is necessary to cut what she calls red tape and inefficiencies.

Anand would not speculate on what those cuts will look like, but her comments come as the U.S. State Department lays offs more than 1,300 employees.

Sen. Peter Boehm is a former ambassador, and he says he hopes the government thinks hard about Canada's place in the world when it looks at constraining Global Affairs Canada's budget.

Alan Kessel, another former diplomat, voices a similar concern and argues cutting diplomats would weaken Canada's influence and ability to protect citizens abroad.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

MORE National ARTICLES

New database tracks more than 2,100 deaths in custody across Canada since 2000

New database tracks more than 2,100 deaths in custody across Canada since 2000
A new database from a project monitoring law enforcement and corrections in Canada lists more than 2,100 deaths in custody over the past 24 years. Alexander McClelland, associate criminology professor at Carleton University and lead researcher with the Tracking (In)Justice project, says the database was compiled using media reports, provincial data and more than 20 freedom of information requests.

New database tracks more than 2,100 deaths in custody across Canada since 2000

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal says it can hear allegations of online hate speech

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal says it can hear allegations of online hate speech
British Columbia's Human Rights Tribunal has ruled it has the authority to hear cases about allegations of online hate speech. The tribunal says provincial human rights laws against publications that perpetrate discrimination or hatred fall under the province's jurisdiction, not the federal government's control over telecommunications.

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal says it can hear allegations of online hate speech

BC's unemployment rate second lowest in Canada

BC's unemployment rate second lowest in Canada
B-C's jobs minister says the province is holding steady in the face of high interest rates and slower growth globally, adding nearly 64-thousand jobs in the past year. Brenda Bailey says the unemployment rate is 5.5 per cent, the second lowest among the provinces, while B-C had the highest average hourly wage last month.

BC's unemployment rate second lowest in Canada

Info needed in Vancouver assault

Info needed in Vancouver assault
Police in Vancouver are appealing to the public for information after a serious assault in the city's Downtown Eastside neigbourhood. They say it happened just after 1:30 a-m, when officers were called to reports of a man with life-threatening injuries near the intersection of Main and Hastings.

Info needed in Vancouver assault

Canada imposes sanctions on anniversary of fraudulent 2020 Belarus election

Canada imposes sanctions on anniversary of fraudulent 2020 Belarus election
The sanctions are in response to what Joly describes as ongoing and systematic human rights abuses in Belarus, and support for Russia's illegal war of aggression against Ukraine.  Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko marked 30 years in power in that country last month. 

Canada imposes sanctions on anniversary of fraudulent 2020 Belarus election

'Extra hoops': Parks Canada's lease system, building rules could delay Jasper rebuild

'Extra hoops': Parks Canada's lease system, building rules could delay Jasper rebuild
Residents of Jasper, Alta., who lost their homes in last month’s wildfire face unique rebuilding challenges tied to leasing provisions nearly as old as Canada, followed modern rules dictating what they can and can’t construct. Lawyer Jessica Reed said property owners in the townsite in Jasper National Park own their buildings but, unlike other municipalities, don’t own the land they sit on.

'Extra hoops': Parks Canada's lease system, building rules could delay Jasper rebuild