Politicians Never Spend Their Own Money


Posted originally on Jun 25, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

The University of Ottawa sends its sincere congratulations to Louise Arbour  on being appointed Canada's 31st governor general. A woman of conviction,  Arbour has worked tirelessly to advance the law and justice

The Canadian government has quietly expanded the clothing allowances available to the Governor General, and the timing could not be more tone-deaf. While Canadians struggle with inflation, housing costs, and rising taxes, Ottawa has decided that the person already living in Rideau Hall requires even more taxpayer-funded support for wardrobes and official appearances. The Governor General currently earns a salary of roughly C$378,000 per year, lives in an official residence maintained at public expense, travels at taxpayer expense, receives staff support, security, transportation, and a lengthy list of other publicly funded benefits. Yet somehow that was not enough.

According to the revised guidelines, the annual clothing allowance for the Governor General has increased from C$100,000 to C$130,000. The maximum amount that can be spent on ceremonial attire has also increased substantially, while clothing purchased with public funds remains government property. Think about that for a moment. The average Canadian household is trying to figure out how to pay for groceries, rent, mortgages, insurance, and utility bills while government officials are debating whether C$100,000 a year is enough for clothing. The political class truly lives in a different universe.

What makes this even more absurd is that the Governor General’s office already receives millions of dollars annually to operate. Rideau Hall employs dozens of staff members, maintains extensive grounds, hosts official events, and receives funding for travel and hospitality.

Rideau hall updated its clothing guidelines so the new governor general Louise Arbour and future governors general can't bill the government for casual clothing or business attire.

This is the same mentality that drives every sovereign debt crisis. Governments become disconnected from the source of their funding. They begin treating taxpayer money as an unlimited resource rather than the product of someone else’s labor. Every expenditure can be justified. Every program becomes essential. Every privilege becomes a necessity. Meanwhile, the national debt continues to rise. Canada has already accumulated enormous federal and provincial debt burdens while interest costs continue climbing. Yet government spending rarely moves in only one direction.

To be fair, Rideau Hall deserves credit for clarifying that casual and business clothing cannot be billed to taxpayers and for limiting reimbursement to official ceremonial functions. However, the larger question remains unanswered. Why does government spending continue to expand in virtually every direction while citizens are repeatedly told they must accept higher taxes, lower living standards, and fewer opportunities? That is the question driving public anger across Canada and throughout the Western world.

The problem is not whether the Governor General spends C$100,000 or C$130,000 on clothing. The problem is that nobody in government appears capable of recognizing how ridiculous this looks to the people paying the bills. Inflation accelerated to 3.2% in May. Housing affordability is among the worst in the developed world. Food bank usage continues reaching record levels in many communities. Young Canadians increasingly believe they will never own a home. Against that backdrop, Ottawa is debating six-figure wardrobe budgets.