Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Debate on throne speech gets underway

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2020 05:55 PM
  • Debate on throne speech gets underway

The fate of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's minority Liberal government hangs in the balance as Parliament resumed all normal operations Thursday for the first time in six months.

Several dozen MPs took their seats in the chamber, while more signed in online as opposition parties readied to give their official responses to Wednesday's speech from the throne.

They've already signalled the government can't count on support from any of them to survive the eventual confidence vote and avoid plunging the country into an election when some areas are already in a second wave of the deadly COVID-19 pandemic.

The Conservatives were unequivocal: they will not support the throne speech.

They accused the Liberals of using prorogation, which led to the speech, to shut down parliamentary scrutiny of their decision to award WE Charity a contract to run a student grant program.

Before debate on the speech could even get underway, Conservative MP Michael Barrett was up on his feet saying his privileges had been breached by the redactions of documents related to that affair, showing that the Opposition does not intend to let that issue go.

"If the speech from the throne was about presenting a refreshing agenda reflecting the COVID pandemic, the prime minister could have simply prorogued Parliament the night before last, or yesterday morning for that matter," Barrett said.

"What he didn't need to do was to shut down Parliament on the 18th of August. The only thing that accomplished was to kill committee investigations cold in their tracks."

The committees are to be reconstituted in the coming days, part of getting the hybrid Parliament back underway.

In debating the speech itself, Conservative deputy leader Candice Bergen said the Liberals' plan leaves numerous Canadians out, citing seasonal workers, people who run tourism businesses, families that are nursing along old minivans and can’t afford new electric cars, people who drive pickup trucks and are "tired of being insulted by Liberal elites."

Thousands of Canadians have been left behind, Bergen said, and the speech from the throne offers them nothing.

"It’s clear, Mr. Speaker, the only reason (Trudeau) prorogued Parliament was to cover up and distract from his own scandal," Bergen said. "So it’s also very disturbing that there is no plan to deal with this pandemic."

Trudeau shot back a few minutes later. It’s amazing the Conservatives accuse his government of having no plan, then object to the points of that plan, he said.

"When the pandemic struck, Conservatives were more concerned with austerity than with helping people, and they’ve doubled down on that point of view," he said.

Debate on the throne speech is scheduled for six days, though they do not have to be consecutive.

Bloc Québécois MPs have said they will not consider supporting the throne speech unless Trudeau agrees to fork over at least $28 billion more each year in unconditional transfer payments to provinces for health care, as demanded unanimously last week by premiers.

Bloc Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet is giving the government just one week to accede to that demand, in the expectation that the confidence vote on the throne speech will take place next week.

Trudeau said in the Commons that he intends to have a first ministers' conference to talk about updating the Canada Health Act, which doesn't fit the modern reality of health care well. He and the premiers have worked well together for the common good and he wants to keep doing so, he said.

But that won't meet Blanchet's demand.

That leaves New Democrats as the Liberals' most likely dance partner but NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has conditions of his own: legislation assuring that Canadians left jobless due to the pandemic won't have their emergency benefits cut and that Canadians who fall ill will get paid sick leave.

It seems the Liberals are on their way to doing that, as they introduced legislation Thursday that would raise the value of weekly benefits for unemployed workers to $500 a week.

The legislation, if passed, would bring the value of payments to the same level as under the Canada Emergency Response Benefit, which ends this week.

The same floor will be placed on employment insurance benefits for those eligible for the program.

Last month, the government promised to ensure that unemployed Canadians would continue to get $400 per week under proposed reforms to the employment insurance program.

Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough did not answer a question about whether the increased amount in the new legislation was designed to meet the demands of the NDP.

The throne speech promised to do whatever it takes to protect Canadians' lives and provide financial support for as long as the pandemic rages, including extending the 75 per cent emergency wage subsidy through to next summer and making a "significant, long-term, sustained investment" in a Canada-wide child-care system.

It also promised expanded emergency loans for businesses and targeted financial support for industries hardest hit by the pandemic, including travel, tourism and hospitality.

Over the longer term, the speech promised to work with the provinces to set national standards for long-term care facilities, where more than 80 per cent of Canada's COVID-19-related deaths have occurred, and to set up a universal pharmacare program.

And it promised to make action on climate change the "cornerstone" of its plan to create one million new jobs.

Apart from brief sittings to pass emergency aid legislation, Parliament has been suspended since the country went into lockdown in mid-March to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Those modified sittings gave opposition MPs a chance to question the government but did not allow for the full range of normal parliamentary operations, such as opposition days and private members' bills.

Under a motion passed unanimously Wednesday, all parliamentary functions are now restored, albeit with a new hybrid model House of Commons.

Until at least Dec. 11, only a small number of MPs will be physically present in the chamber while the rest will participate virtually, including taking part in rollcall votes via video conference.

MORE National ARTICLES

Freeland sworn in as federal finance minister

Freeland sworn in as federal finance minister
Chrystia Freeland is now the federal finance minister, at a time when Canada is dealing with the biggest budget deficit since the Second World War — a job that will involve planning for an economic recovery as the COVID-19 pandemic continues.

Freeland sworn in as federal finance minister

N.B. Liberals announce ex-Tory as candidate

N.B. Liberals announce ex-Tory as candidate
Former Progressive Conservative deputy leader Robert Gauvin has flipped to the Liberals and took a swipe at his former colleagues Tuesday, calling them "ice cold" when it comes to helping the most vulnerable.

N.B. Liberals announce ex-Tory as candidate

Nisga'a leader Joe Gosnell dies at 85

Nisga'a leader Joe Gosnell dies at 85
A statement from the Nisga'a Lisims government of northwestern British Columbia says Gosnell died in his home in New Aiyansh after a long battle with cancer.

Nisga'a leader Joe Gosnell dies at 85

Many parents nervous about school: survey

Many parents nervous about school: survey
With only weeks until classes resume, a new survey suggests the majority of Canadian parents plan to send their kids back to school but most would want classes cancelled if there is a new COVID-19 outbreak in their community.

Many parents nervous about school: survey

Halifax constables given suspended sentences

Halifax constables given suspended sentences
A Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge on Monday handed two special constables with Halifax police suspended sentences with three years probation in the June 2016 suffocation death of an inmate at the city's detention centre.

Halifax constables given suspended sentences

Belarus election 'fraudulent': Champagne

Belarus election 'fraudulent': Champagne
Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne says Canada does not accept the results of the "fraudulent" presidential election in Belarus.

Belarus election 'fraudulent': Champagne