It’s only been a year since the substitute drama teacher and former river raft instructor, Justin Trudeau, became Canada’s Prime Minister. Unsurprisingly, he’s already made a mess. Here’s how he (and his retinue) spent your money.

To kick it off, Catherine McKenna, the woefully naive, doe-eyed Environment Minister, spent $6,662 on a photojournalist to document her every move at the Paris Climate Change conference (on top of the $1 million it already cost for Canada to attend). I guess none of the 24 people she employs to write her tweets and take her “everyday pictures” was up to the challenge.

She’s not alone. Health Minister Jane Philpott squandered $3,815 of taxpayer money to ride around in a limo—one day she racked up a bill of $1,700. Naturally, the limo company is owned by one of her former campaign volunteers. After the price tag surfaced, even Philpott herself said the cost was “inappropriate”, and the price was just “too high”. If only she exercised such discretion before spending the money. In other news, at least she promised to repay the $520 she billed taxpayers to use Air Canada’s executive airport lounges.

You’d think Canada’s dopey government could’ve organized some sort of a discount for lounge use—the government owns Air Canada after all.

Not only are expense accounts being abused, Canadians are also being billed an exorbitant amount in “moving fees” for government agents. For example, various Minister’s Chiefs of Staff blew through $119,825, $103,997, $126,669, and $80,382 on moving costs. What ever happened to giving the neighborhood kid a few bucks to help carry your couch into the moving truck?

It gets better. The Liberals have also been “making it rain” on flights around the world. On a recent trip to Turkey, in-flight food and drinks cost Trudeau’s retinue $1,309 per person. They even managed to spend $41 per person on a trip to Washington DC—an 80 minute flight. How can someone eat that much on a plane? Who even eats on planes? Maybe it wasn’t food. Maybe the cost has something to do with the 39 bottles of wine they bought on a short-haul flight.

Either way, that’s nothing compared to the $132,904.85 the Liberals spent on a dinner at Casa Loma to entertain Mexico’s visiting president ($11,000 of which was spent on booze). That works out to $503 per person. That must have been one delicious meal. My mouth is watering.

At this rate, they’ll need that carbon tax they’ve been promising just to pay for their dinners (shame it wont’ do jack to lower atmospheric carbon levels). Heck, they might even need to reclaim that $2.65 billion Trudeau promised (without consultation) to help developing countries fight climate change (an exercise in jousting windmills if ever there was one).

As you may have guessed, the Justin and his cronies have managed to leave the “modest deficit” they promised in the dust, pushing the deficit from $30 billion over 3 years to $30 billion in the first year. They now estimate their deficit will increase to $70 billion by the time the next election rolls around.

Unsurprising. Especially since Justin spent an extra $9 billion on promises in just March of 2016. Not even they know how fast they can spend our money—but they’re doing their best to find out.

And just in case you were wondering: no, they will not balance the budget by next election. If only they broke their other campaign promises.

But they didn’t. For example, they increased the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s budget by $675 million over the next three years. They’ll need them come next election time. Might as well buy them now.

But can we really blame the Ministers and the government for their extravagant spending? Are they not just following Justin’s lead? After all, he did hire two full-time nannies to raise his children for him (his stay-at-home wife, along with her two personal assistants, are too swamped, apparently). On top of that, he’s taken monthly vacations (yes, monthly) ever since he became Prime Minister. At times, he’s even taken his entire extended family as well—all on the public dime.

“Modest deficit” they said. “Canada’s back!” they said. Well, Canada’s back alright: corrupt Canada. Bankrupt Canada. Liberal Canada.

It’s going to be a long four years.