The Canadians continued to head towards the progress of the polls on Sunday as the federal leaders campaigned in the Battlefield province of British Columbia and in the capital.
The conservative chief Pierre Hairy launched the day in a grocery store in Surrey, British Columbia, with another advertisement on inflation.
As a result, a reduction in public spending would facilitate pressures on prices, Hairyvre said that a conservative government would reduce the Ottawa annual budget for $ 10 billion consultants.
“Inflation is what happens when governments spend money they do not have, so they simply print money. More money by offering a fixed goods offer is equivalent to higher prices for everything,” he said.
Statistics Canada said on Tuesday that the annual inflation rate was slightly relaxed at 2.3% nationally in March, while food prices increased from 3.2% from one year to other.

Hairyvre has also made its doors against the Liberal campaign platform, unveiled on Saturday, which offers $ 129 billion in new expenses over the next four years in addition to existing commitments.

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Liberal chief Mark Carney presented his platform as an investment to make Canada more autonomous in response to the trade war with the United States.
Hairyvre accused Carney on Sunday of having “printed money” during his time as governor of the Bank of England and blamed him for the recent fight of this strong inflation country.
Carney led the Bank of England from 2013 to 2020 and was not responsible for the country’s response to the COVVI-19 pandemic. Inflation jumped in Canada and the United Kingdom during the period of pandemic recovery and culminated in the two countries in 2022.
Hairyvre did not respond directly on Sunday when he asked if he maintained the national frost on the purchase or transfer of handguns, introduced by the Liberal government in 2022.
He argued that handguns in the Canadian streets are largely brought from the United States and said that it would retract firearm traffickers to combat violence weapons of handguns.
The possession of a recorded handgun purchased before the frost remains legal in Canada, while these weapons cannot be legally transferred only from certain exempt companies and individuals.
After concluding his announcement and answering four questions from the media chosen by his campaign, Hairyvre seemed to ignore journalists by shouting additional questions – one of which the conservatives publish their entirely cost electoral platform.
The NPD unveiled its campaign campaign costs on Saturday, while the Conservatives said their platform will soon be coming.
The chief of the NPD, Jagmeet Singh, was also in British Columbia on Sunday, speaking of living cost problems with a young family in Victoria. He repeated his campaign promises to cap the price of the essential elements of food and to legislate protections against prices at grocery store.
British Columbia has become a key battlefield during the general elections while the polls show that the liberal and conservative candidates were piercing in certain districts represented by the deputies of the NPD.
Singh was asked on Sunday if it advocated strategic vote to consolidate party support against any conservative gains in the region.
“I call people to vote according to what they care about the most. And if they want to stop a curator here on Vancouver Island, the best way to do so is to vote for a new Democrat,” he said.
Singh also said that Canadians concerned about cuts under a liberal government should “send a new democrat to Ottawa” to fight for them.
Carney, who appears for a seat in Nepean, outside Ottawa, was to hold a rally there on Sunday afternoon.
Sunday was the second day of the last day of the surveys in advance, which experienced a record start on Friday.
Elections Canada said nearly two million people turned out to have voted on the first day of voting in advance, which led to long alignments in certain polling stations.
A spokesperson for the Independent Agency said that polls were “very busy” on Saturday and that workers were making adjustments to reduce the queues.

–The files of the Canadian press’ Brenna Owen
& Copy 2025 the Canadian press