The Privy Council Office is facing scrutiny after records revealed significant spending on consultants, luxury services, and discretionary perks—despite maintaining a large in-house workforce.
According to documents obtained through access-to-information requests, the department spent millions on outside contractors for work that overlaps with roles already performed by federal employees. In 2025 alone, the PCO spent $17.4 million on professional services, including $5.8 million on communications, marketing, financial, and strategic consulting, even though it employs roughly 320 staff in similar positions.
Additional expenditures raised eyebrows, including $12,900 for yoga instruction, $20,400 for limousine services, $136,290 on hotel accommodations, and $386,700 on office furniture. Records also show spending on specialty items such as ceremonial plaques, coins, crests, and artwork.
Critics argue the spending reflects an overreliance on external consultants and unnecessary luxuries at a time when Canadians are grappling with affordability challenges. The Canadian Taxpayers Federation has called on the federal government to rein in administrative spending and make better use of existing public service resources.
The controversy comes as Prime Minister Mark Carney has pledged to reduce government waste and curb the use of outside consultants. The latest figures are likely to intensify calls for greater oversight and accountability in federal spending.









