"More than a third of Canadians — 36 per cent — would rate his performance as poor or very poor. Another 36 per cent would mark it as average."
...
When asked what the federal government should be spending tax revenues on, Canadians were somewhat split, with 21 per cent saying it should be investing in social programs, 19 per cent on infrastructure, and 18 per cent on reducing personal income taxes.
But an overwhelming forty per cent of respondents believe Trudeau's top fiscal priority should be reducing the federal deficit, which the government expects to hit $28.5 billion this fiscal year"
The note for Finance Minister Bill Morneau, obtained by CBC News under the Access to Information Act, forecasts average annual growth of just 1.7 per cent this year through to 2022.
That slower-growth number has big implications for federal tax revenues and annual deficits, and suggests Morneau has little wiggle room for spending in Budget 2018.
"The United States suddenly finds itself at a place where almost everyone who wants a job can find one...raising the prospect of higher wages." -Washington Post on the booming @realDonaldTrump economy