Monday, June 1, 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

Canada changes regulations for chemicals used to make fentanyl, methamphetamine

Canada changes regulations for chemicals used to make fentanyl, methamphetamine
Health Canada says it has amended the regulations for precursor chemicals and manufacturing equipment used to make illegal synthetic drugs like fentanyl and methamphetamine.

Canada changes regulations for chemicals used to make fentanyl, methamphetamine

Prime Minister Carney hands off G7 presidency to France

Prime Minister Carney hands off G7 presidency to France
Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron today to hand over the G7 presidency.

Prime Minister Carney hands off G7 presidency to France

Winter wallop continues across Canada, cancelling classes and stranding trucks

Winter wallop continues across Canada, cancelling classes and stranding trucks
Winter continued its late-December march east across Canada Friday, closing classes and stranding trucks.

Winter wallop continues across Canada, cancelling classes and stranding trucks

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law
The chief of a First Nation in the Great Bear Rainforest says B.C. Premier David Eby risks losing the trust of Indigenous people and could fuel racism if he changes the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. 

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report
A progress report on Canada's emissions targets shows the federal government's projection for greenhouse gas emissions in 2030 is higher than it was two years ago.

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents
A planned high-speed rail project between Toronto and Quebec City could dramatically increase the number of trains that travel along the corridor each day, according to internal documents. 

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents