A Real Platform Should Not Hide the Fine Print

We live in an information economy, yet political parties are offering voters less and less of it. When party promises aren’t described and priced out in detail, it’s not a platform – it’s a press release.

Respect for voters begins with honesty and transparency about what’s being offered, what it costs, and who will pay. That’s how we can assess whether commitments are genuine, not just rhetoric that grabs headlines but leaves voters in the dark. The antidote to US-style political chaos and fake news begins with holding parties to account for comprehensive, clear and honest platforms.

What You Need to Know to Avoid Being Duped

It's alarming that we even need to say that election candidates should be clear and transparent about what they’re proposing, and what it will cost. Sadly, elections across Canada confirm that voters can no longer take even this base level of transparency for granted. Our democracy is worse off for that, as the recent Ontario election made clear.

The risks of slogan-based governance are all too easy to spot right now. All Canadians have to do is look to our southern neighbour, where commitments are changing from moment to moment. This is the opposite of the evidence-based approach for which Gen Squeeze has advocated for more than a decade.

Following the evidence means grounding decisions in data – not the latest poll or wedge issue. When policy proposals are grounded in evidence, voters are better equipped to hold governments to account, because there’s little wiggle room for parties to ‘renegotiate’ commitments down the road.

So what fine print do voters need to avoid being duped? Here’s the minimum that we should call on all candidates and parties to deliver.

1. A Policy Platform

All parties should deliver a detailed platform document no more than two weeks after the election period begins. (We’d like federal and provincial election regulators to make having a platform a requirement parties must meet before they are permitted to field candidates… but we’ll take it one step at a time.)

A policy platform isn’t a set of broad principles. It’s not a collection of high-level statements pointing out what’s not working, but failing to propose a fix. Nor is it a vehicle to blame others.

A policy platform is a thorough, careful, detailed accounting of how a party understands current issues, and will undertake measures to address them.  

Beware of ‘platforms’ that spend more time pointing fingers than presenting a vision or solutions. If a party can’t explain its concrete plan to solve the problems that matter, there’s no way to really assess what they’ll deliver.

Beware of ‘platforms’ that stop with slogans. Sadly, real solutions are seldom that simple. Parties should be willing and able to talk about complexity and how they will balance trade-offs. Because there are always trade-offs – implying otherwise is definitely a dupe!

2. A Costing Table

Responsible platforms must include a tally of the cost of each proposed action, whether new or expanded services, or cuts to current commitments. Without detailed cost information, it’s a press release – not a platform.

Many cuts have a cost, especially when they reduce revenue. Cutting taxes, for example, leaves future governments with fewer resources to fund services on which Canadians rely.

Whether or not you’re in favour of the tax cuts on offer by leading parties, it’s essential to know what they cost – and what measures parties will take to compensate for lost revenue. This is especially pressing with Ottawa already running a $42 billion deficit. Clawing Canada out of this deep fiscal hole should be a top priority for any party campaigning to form government. Cutting taxes makes this climb even steeper.

Assuming parties actually do deliver cost information, here are some things to keep in mind:

  • Platform costings must be sufficiently detailed for voters to assess whether the ambition of a proposal is in line with the funding behind it. It’s easy for parties to oversell a grand vision, but fail to commit sufficient funds to realize it. Beware of this sneaky platform practice designed to dupe voters into buying the hype.
  • Cost information should enable voters to hold parties to account on their spending promises. This means that costs aren’t just rolled up into big categories, but rather are broken down across individual commitments. It also means projecting costs over multiple years, to guard again big election year promises that peter out over time.
  • Platform cost tables should include the impact of party promises on revenue and spending – as well as on the big picture of restoring budget balance. If parties only tell you about the sweeteners, but not the gnarly details on who will pay the price, be on guard. Costings must be placed in the context of current federal finances to give you a meaningful picture of the level of fiscal responsibility to which each party is committed.

Dupe-O-Meter Party Assessments

It’s April 14, 2025. With just two weeks left in the campaign, there isn’t a costed platform in sight.

The Conservatives, Liberals, and NDP all earn a grade of "Silent Neglect" when it comes to featuring the fine print of their promises.

After the election, Canadians must demand more from all political parties, no matter which one you support. Rejuvenating our democracy cannot focus solely on the question of whether our voting system should be first-past-the-post or proportional representation. For elections to offer substance, not slogans, we urgently need parties to release costed platforms early in the campaign. This would allow experts and the media to review them and help voters make sense of the promises being made.

Donald Trump has become infamous for making big promises that attract support while offering little in the way of realistic plans to achieve those goals. If Canada’s democracy is to avoid falling victim to the dangers of political charlatanism, it may be time to consider legislation requiring all parties to submit costed platforms as a condition for running candidates.  Only costed platforms provide the necessary transparency for voters, experts and media to assess whether party promises are trustworthy or just empty slogans.