Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Here's what people are saying about B.C.'s 2026 budget

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2026 09:42 AM
  • Here's what people are saying about B.C.'s 2026 budget

Here's what people are saying about the 2026 British Columbia budget, which delivers a tax-rate increase, a record deficit and public sector cuts.

"It’s our time to take a pause on some of the things we want to do, to do the things that we need to do." — B.C. Finance Minister Brenda Bailey

“(This) budget is an assault on seniors, working families and the small businesses that drive our economy.” — B.C. Conservative Party finance critic Peter Milobar

“It’s become more difficult to understand this government’s priorities beyond LNG, and we have concerns with the lack of transparency and accountability in this years’ service plan. This budget is built on the backs of British Columbians — and it is crushing them.” — BC Green Party finance critic Rob Botterell

“Any cut to front line services, any cut to unionized employees, that provide critical services to British Columbians, is not just going to hurt people that need those services right now, it is also going to hurt the economy.” — BC General Employees' Union president Paul Finch

“They definitely seemed to manage to piss off everybody.” — Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives senior economist Marc Lee

"Despite significant new tax increases, the province's fiscal situation continues on a perilous trajectory, with an eye-popping $80 billion to be added to the debt over the next three years.” — Bridgitte Anderson, president of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade

“This budget stays the course for public education and provides some consistency. However, we know that kids deserve robust and forward-looking investment in their learning environments.” — BC Teachers’ Federation President Carole Gordon

“The budget lacks a defined strategy to address B.C.’s struggling post-secondary sector — a key piece of economic infrastructure in building a stronger and more diverse economy — amid widespread program cuts and layoffs.” — BC Federation of Labour President Sussanne Skidmore

“It's going to put pressure on the family caregivers, people who should be in the workforce, who are now caring for that senior. And it's also going to create a situation where the seniors are not getting the kind of care they should be.” — Seniors Advocate Dan Levitt, referring to delays in care-home construction.

“We've got about $4 billion in the budget in tax increases … and that's really concerning, because the private sector is already very, very weak." — Business Council of British Columbia vice-president of policy David Williams

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Ford says Trump dropping plan to double steel, aluminum tariffs

Ford says Trump dropping plan to double steel, aluminum tariffs
Premier Doug Ford says U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has committed to lowering U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff on Canadian aluminum and steel back to 25 per cent after Ontario agreed to pause a surcharge on electricity exports to the United States.

Ford says Trump dropping plan to double steel, aluminum tariffs

Slower B.C. real estate sales blamed on U.S. tariff uncertainty, association says

Slower B.C. real estate sales blamed on U.S. tariff uncertainty, association says
The British Columbia Real Estate Association says tariff uncertainty has slowed housing activity.  A board report says there were 4,947 residential sales in the province last month, down 9.7 per cent from the same time last year. 

Slower B.C. real estate sales blamed on U.S. tariff uncertainty, association says

Explainer: What's a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?

Explainer: What's a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?
Stock markets are plunging, consumers and businesses have started to sour on the economy, and economists are marking down their estimates for growth this year, with some even seeing rising odds of a recession. The tech-heavy Nasdaq stock index slipped into a correction last week, defined as a 10% drop from its most recent peak. The broader S&P 500 neared that level Tuesday.

Explainer: What's a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?

Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat

Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat
Trump says he will double the steel and aluminum tariffs he promised to deploy on Canadian products tomorrow — to 50 per cent — in response to Ontario's 25 per cent surcharge on electricity exports to the U.S. Trump originally vowed to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports.

Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now
The trade war between the U.S. and Canada took another turn Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to double the tariff on steel and aluminum imports coming from Canada in response to Ontario's surcharge on electricity exports. Trump said 50 per cent tariffs will be placed on Canadian steel and aluminum starting Wednesday, up from the 25 per cent tariffs that had been expected to apply to those materials.

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs
Prime minister-designate Mark Carney says he will keep Canadian retaliatory tariffs in place until "Americans show us respect" and commit to free trade again. Carney is reacting after U.S. President Donald Trump moved today to double incoming tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, which Carney calls an attack on Canadian workers and businesses.

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs