There’s something rotten at the heart of Ottawa, and its stench is growing harder to ignore.
Behind closed doors, far from the cameras and choreographed pressers, a quiet pact may have already been made. A whisper in the dark, a handshake behind velvet curtains. Do whatever you want, Justin Trudeau may have told Mark Carney. There will be no consequences.
And so, the stage is set for a political horror story dressed in polite technocratic language.
Carney, the globe-trotting banker turned political messiah, wasn’t even Prime Minister yet, but the script is already clear: no budget, no transparency, no limits. He’ll spend like Trudeau on steroids—except with even fewer guardrails and zero interest in pretending to play by the rules. Accountability? That’s for the little people.
Remember how Trudeau bulldozed through scandal after scandal—Aga Khan, SNC-Lavalin, WE Charity—and walked away without a scratch? Carney watched and learned. But he’s not coming in as a student. He’s stepping onto the scene as the master.
We’re not just talking about more deficits—we’re talking about record-shattering debt, shoved onto the backs of future generations like a millstone around a drowning man’s neck. We’re talking about a financial black hole so deep, so wide, no light escapes. And we’re not going to see the receipts, either. You want a budget? You’ll get silence and spin.
This isn’t politics. It’s kleptocracy in a tailored suit. And the scariest part? He hasn’t even been elected yet.
Carney is poised to become the most corrupt Prime Minister Canada has ever known—surpassing even Trudeau’s breathtaking legacy of ethical gymnastics. He’s entering the arena with a blank cheque, a smirk, and a quiet promise that whatever horrors come next, you’ll get no answers. Just darkness. And debt.
The question is no longer if we’re headed into a storm.
It’s who lit the match before the clouds rolled in.
The question is no longer if we’re headed into a storm.
It’s who lit the match before the clouds rolled in