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Scheer compares Trudeau debt to parents leaving ‘unpaid credit card bill’ to children

WATCH ABOVE: Scheer claims Trudeau has increased debt 'faster than any peacetime prime minister in Canadian history' – Nov 17, 2018

In a speech at an Ontario Progressive Conservative Party Convention Saturday morning, Conservative Party of Canada leader Andrew Scheer criticized the spending practices of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party.

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“He has increased Canada’s debt faster than any peacetime prime minister in Canadian history,” Scheer asserted.

WATCH: Carbon tax ‘not a price’ on pollution: Scheer

Spending by the Canadian government has notably increased since Trudeau took office.

Global News previously assembled a database to track government spending, which revealed that the Liberals have made nearly 9,000 spending announcements since Trudeau took office two years ago, far surpassing the 7,300 spending announcements made during the four years of the Harper majority government.

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“No one would leave an unpaid credit card bill to their children, but that’s exactly what Trudeau is doing,” Scheer continued during his speech.

Scheer’s comments seem to stem from a report published by the Fraser Institute in 2017, stating that Trudeau is on track to be the be the largest accumulator of debt among prime ministers who took office in times of economic stability and minimal global conflict.

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Some experts have noted, however, that many estimates regarding Canada’s federal debt do not take into account the government’s current assets.

Global News reported in March that while our federal market debt hit $1 trillion this year, this number is offset by almost $380 billion in assets, bringing the total of the country’s net debt to a more manageable $651 billion.

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WATCH: Federal government’s market debt tops $1 trillion

According to documents prepared by RBC based on government projections, Canada’s net debt is expected to rise to $730 billion by 2023. Between 2016, the first full year Trudeau held office, and 2023, the year RBC’s projections end, the federal net debt will have increased by a potential $1 billion over that seven-year period.

The seven-year-period prior to 2016 saw a comparable net debt accumulation of approximately $1 billion as well.

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It’s important to note that Conservative leader Stephen Harper was prime minister for six of those seven years, having taken office in 2006 and held office for three terms.

In addition to discussing the spending practices of the Trudeau government, Scheer pledged to do away with Trudeau’s carbon tax, pledged to continue challenging the prime minister during Question Period in the House of Commons, and encouraged Ontario Conservatives to make Trudeau a “one-term prime minister.”

The next federal election will take place in October 2019.

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