Scheer pledges to cut foreign aid by 25%, re-invest savings in various tax cuts
TORONTO — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is promising a leaner foreign policy by taking away aid funding from countries he says don’t need it or don’t deserve it, and spending the money instead on domestic programs and tax cuts.
Canada is too generous with what he called “middle- and upper-income” countries such as Argentina, Brazil and Italy, he said Tuesday. And Canadians’ tax dollars, he added, shouldn’t be going towards “repressive regimes,” such as in Iran and North Korea, that are “hostile to Canada’s interests and values.”
Scheer’s pledge would cut 25 per cent from Canada’s $6-billion foreign aid budget, which the Conservative leader portrayed as poorly managed by the Liberals. The savings, Scheer added, would be reinvested in his party’s plans for a universal tax cut and various tax credits.
He vowed to redirect $700 million to countries “with grave humanitarian or refugee challenges such as much of sub-Saharan Africa,” which he said would get even more than they do now.