Thursday, May 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Number of federal public service jobs could drop by almost 60,000, report predicts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2025 01:39 PM
  • Number of federal public service jobs could drop by almost 60,000, report predicts

A new report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives says the federal public service could shed almost 60,000 jobs over the next four years as Ottawa looks to cut costs.

Earlier this month, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne sent letters to multiple ministers asking them to cut program spending at their departments by 7.5 per cent next spring, 10 per cent the year after and 15 per cent in 2028-29.

The report, written by senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives David Macdonald, says the federal public service could lose up to 57,000 employees by 2028.

The report predicts that tens of thousands of jobs will be cut at the Canada Revenue Agency, Employment and Social Development and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada — three federal bodies that already have seen a drop in employees in recent months.

The report says the cities of Ottawa and Gatineau will likely "bear the brunt" of the cuts because almost half of the job losses will be in the National Capital Region.

The report predicts service impacts will be felt across the country and the cuts will mean longer wait times, more errors and "fewer people to fix those errors."

The report says the government is asking departments to find savings to help cover major military spending increases and tax cuts. It says the Department of Defence, the RCMP, the Canada Border Services Agency, the Supreme Court and the Parliamentary Budget Office are "protected departments" and need to plan for a smaller two per cent cut.

The Canadian Press has reached out to the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat for confirmation of those departments' protected status but has not yet received a response.

The report suggests ministers have some flexibility in choosing where the cuts will land.

"For instance, a department may propose to cut fewer than 15 per cent of their staff, but that means other budget items will have to be cut by more than 15 per cent to make up the difference," it says.

In an earlier report, Macdonald said there could also be cuts to things like transfers to First Nations governments, supports for veterans and newcomers, international aid and research.

Prime Minister Mark Carney campaigned in the spring election on a promise to "cap" but not cut public service employment. He also promised to launch a "comprehensive review" of government spending to increase productivity.

In an email, Macdonald said Carney's campaign promise not to cut the public service "never made sense."

He said operational expenditures are already "capped" at about $130 billion a year and that "it always had to be cuts."

"In the campaign, they were targeting staffing (and) other operational spending," Macdonald said in the email. 

"But this expanded substantially to include departmental transfers in July, probably to pay for the massive new defence spending that happened just weeks after the election (and weren't in the platform or certainly not that quickly)."

Macdonald said the government likely will offer buyouts to older employees to encourage more retirements. He also said cuts will likely involve "the end of all term and casual employment."

"These are going to tend to be younger workers who aren't yet indeterminate," he said. "Then it will be indeterminates that will go through workforce adjustment that may end in layoffs."

Nathan Prier, president of the Canadian Association of Professional Employees, said the union is very concerned by what it calls the "broken promise" not to cut the federal public service.

He said departments are now being told to find savings that could amount to a "drastic reduction in the quality of public services that Canadians rely on ..."

"Canadians were hoping with their choice last election that as a country we’d stand up to threats from (U.S. President Donald Trump), make strategic investments in our economy and diversify our trading partners, and to do that we need a strong federal public service," Prier said.

The Carney government's cuts follow previous cuts introduced in Budget 2023 under the "refocusing government spending" initiative. The report said those cuts are already affecting staffing levels and that their "savings" will hit their peak impact in 2026-27.

The federal public service shrunk by almost 10,000 people last year, with the number of public servants employed by the federal government falling from 367,772 to 357,965.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. voters face atmospheric river with heavy rain, high winds on election day

B.C. voters face atmospheric river with heavy rain, high winds on election day
Environment Canada says the weather system will bring prolonged heavy rain to Metro Vancouver, the Sunshine Coast, Fraser Valley, Howe Sound, Whistler and Vancouver Island starting Friday.

B.C. voters face atmospheric river with heavy rain, high winds on election day

Indecent exposure on Nanaimo trail

Indecent exposure on Nanaimo trail
Mounties in Nanaimo are warning the public after a case of indecent exposure on a local trail. The incident took place around 1 p-m on October 15th on the Cable Bay Trail, where officers met with a 49-year-old woman who seemed to be shaken.

Indecent exposure on Nanaimo trail

Snow warnings along B.C.-Yukon border as southern B.C. braces for atmospheric river

Snow warnings along B.C.-Yukon border as southern B.C. braces for atmospheric river
Environment Canada has issued the first snowfall warnings of the season along the British Columbia and Yukon border, with accumulations up to 20 centimetres expected in some areas. The weather office says the snow will spread through southwestern Yukon starting today and will persist until Saturday.

Snow warnings along B.C.-Yukon border as southern B.C. braces for atmospheric river

Trudeau to shuffle his cabinet as four more ministers won't run in next election

Trudeau to shuffle his cabinet as four more ministers won't run in next election
It's not clear yet when the shuffle will happen but the source, who spoke on background, says it could be by the end of next week. It won't happen before all Liberal caucus members are expected to meet on Parliament Hill on Oct. 23, a meeting that could be quite tense amid another movement among Liberal MPs to push Trudeau to resign.

Trudeau to shuffle his cabinet as four more ministers won't run in next election

Rustad says no plan for user-pays health as B.C. voters break advance polling record

Rustad says no plan for user-pays health as B.C. voters break advance polling record
B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad says he has no plan for a user-pays health-care system in British Columbia, after the rival NDP released a recording of him calling the Canada Health Act "silly" for not allowing such a system. NDP Leader David Eby accused Rustad of planning "American style" user pays, saying he would let people "buy their way to the front of the line."

Rustad says no plan for user-pays health as B.C. voters break advance polling record

New area code for BC in 2025

New area code for BC in 2025
British Columbia is getting a new phone area code next year.  The 2-5-7 area code will be introduced gradually starting May 24th.

New area code for BC in 2025