Substrate
business

Quebec Premier Defends Spending Pledges After Finance Minister Statement

Quebec Premier Christine Fréchette defended new spending commitments on Saturday after a Radio-Canada report revealed the province's finance minister had warned her about exceeding a $250-million annual fund.

Cbc
1 source·May 23, 8:02 PM(5 days ago)·2m read
Quebec Premier Defends Spending Pledges After Finance Minister Statementcitizen.co.za
Audio version
Tap play to generate a narrated version.

Quebec Premier Christine Fréchette defended her spending promises on Saturday, despite a warning from the province's finance minister that she may surpass the $250-million fund allocated to her. " Since taking office in April, Fréchette has already said the government will reimburse part of the welcome tax paid by first-time homebuyers as well as the carbon tax for farmers.

She also announced a tax cut for small and medium-sized businesses.

She is expected to announce the elimination of the Quebec Sales Tax on certain grocery and pharmacy items in the coming days. That measure is expected to cost $100 million, which brings the total amount of her pledges to around $330 million so far. The Quebec budget allocated $250 million per year for five years for the new leader of the Coalition Avenir Québec to deliver on her promises.

, noting that Quebecers are having a tough time due to pressures such as the conflict in the Middle East. "We're thinking about the cost of groceries, the cost of housing ... and gas as well," she told reporters. "The minister of finance is doing his job.

" The finance minister downplayed the importance of his message to Fréchette, saying he had written "thousands" of similar messages during his time at the National Bank of Canada. "That's my style: concise, direct," he said. " Environment Minister Pascale Déry also felt that the message from the finance minister wasn't unusual.

"There's nothing in there that surprises me, that's concerning, or that's out of the ordinary," she said.

Fréchette's rivals, however, were quick to pounce. "Ms.

Fréchette, like Mr. Legault before her, continues to spend lavishly in an attempt to win over voters," Liberal Leader Charles Milliard wrote on X. " Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon said the news was "undeniable proof" that nothing has changed in the CAQ party since Fréchette succeeded François Legault as leader.

"They've learned nothing from their failures," he wrote. Fréchette is presiding over her party's first general council meeting since becoming premier. She was due to deliver a speech Saturday afternoon.

Key Facts

$250 million
annual fund allocated for new CAQ leader's promises
$330 million
total cost of spending pledges announced so far
April
month Fréchette took office as premier
$100 million
projected cost of planned QST elimination

Story Timeline

3 events
  1. Earlier this month

    Finance minister wrote to premier expressing spending concerns.

    1 sourceCbc
  2. Saturday morning

    Radio-Canada published report on the finance minister's letter.

    1 sourceCbc
  3. Saturday

    Premier defended spending pledges at party meeting in Lévis.

    1 sourceCbc

Potential Impact

  1. 01

    The province may need to adjust its budget if total spending exceeds the $250-million annual allocation.

  2. 02

    Opposition parties may increase criticism of the Coalition Avenir Québec government ahead of future elections.

Transparency Panel

Sources cross-referenced1
Confidence score65%
Synthesized bySubstrate AI
Word count435 words
PublishedMay 23, 2026, 8:02 PM
Bias signals removed2 across 1 outlet
Signal Breakdown
Loaded 1Speculative 1

Related Stories

EU Fines Temu €200 Million Over Unsafe ProductsLos Angeles Times
business3 hrs ago

EU Fines Temu €200 Million Over Unsafe Products

The European Commission imposed a €200 million fine on Chinese e-commerce platform Temu for failing to assess risks from illegal goods. The penalty is the second issued under the Digital Services Act.

Los Angeles Times
The New York Times
BBC News
3 sources
Aggreko to Build Off-Grid Hybrid Plant for Eva Copper MineAbc
business23 hrs ago

Aggreko to Build Off-Grid Hybrid Plant for Eva Copper Mine

Global energy company Aggreko will construct Australia's largest off-grid renewable hybrid power facility at the Eva Copper Mine in North West Queensland. The 15-year project will supply 72 megawatts of power using solar, battery storage and thermal generation.

Abc
1 source
EU fines Temu more than $230 million over illegal product salestheyeshivaworld.com
business1 day ago

EU fines Temu more than $230 million over illegal product sales

The European Commission imposed a €200 million penalty on the Chinese e-commerce platform after finding consumers are very likely to encounter illegal items. Temu has until August 26 to submit a compliance plan or face further penalties.

The New York Times
The Verge
2 sources