Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Liberal budget will pass with NDP support

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2022 09:58 AM
  • Liberal budget will pass with NDP support

OTTAWA - The Liberals have done enough to honour their agreement with the NDP, but that doesn't mean the federal budget will pass without opposition.

"We still have critiques and criticisms," NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Thursday. "We're concerned, deeply concerned, about the approach on the environment."

He said the government should be spending more on clean energy instead of giving subsidies to fossil fuel companies.

The leaders of the Green party and Bloc Québécois echoed that.

Amita Kuttner said the plan to get to net-zero is not enough to meet Canada's emissions reduction targets and the Greens wanted the budget to centre on climate change in every policy area.

Yves-Francois Blanchet, for his part, said he thinks the Liberals intend to be "the instrument" of the oil and gas industry.

"The difference between this government and the Conservatives is the Conservatives would admit it," Blanchet said.

Three of the four opposition parties are praising the Liberals' emphasis on housing.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said the commitment to double the number of homes built annually over the next decade is the "landmark ambition" of this budget.

The $14 billion in new spending on housing also includes a two-year ban on foreign buyers, targeted funding for municipalities to build affordable housing and money to double the first time homebuyers' tax credit.

Kuttner said the Greens were "very happy to see the promise of 6,000 units" of co-operative housing.

Singh said his party forced the Liberals to reconsider what the government considers to be affordable housing. It's now calculated at 80 per cent of the average market rate rather than 80 per cent of median income, a definition that "would have resulted in not-affordable housing."

Interim Conservative leader Candice Bergen said the Official Opposition didn't find what it was looking for in the housing plan.

"It is a typical, classic NDP spend-and-tax budget," she said at a news conference.

The Tories have spent the last several weeks in question period referring to Thursday as the release of Canada's first NDP budget, demanding to know whether the Liberals would give in to the NDP's "extreme demands."

Bergen said the Liberals have "lost their way," leaning further to the left.

"The Liberals that we knew even 10 years ago ceased to exist."

Friday is the first of four days of debate on the government motion concerning the budget. The Conservatives will have first crack at amending it, the Bloc Québécois second. Both parties have indicated they'll be voting against the Liberals.

The Conservatives were happy to see more than $8 billion directed toward the defence budget. They put forward a motion in the House of Commons earlier this week to raise defence spending to two per cent of Canada's GDP, a significant increase that NATO allies have been calling for.

The budget plan will raise spending to 1.5 per cent, according to finance officials.

That piece of the plan isn't sitting well with the Liberals' main dance partner, but it isn't enough to cause the confidence and supply deal to collapse.

That means when Parliament resumes sitting after the two-week break, the government can breathe easy knowing it has the numbers to survive any confidence votes on the budget motion.

Government House leader Mark Holland said debate will continue on April 25, 26 and 27.

After that, the budget implementation bill will be up for a debate of its own, and it's likely the opposition parties will have plenty to say.

MORE National ARTICLES

Health Canada updates AstraZeneca vaccine label

Health Canada updates AstraZeneca vaccine label
Health Canada is updating the label for the Oxford-AstraZeneca and COVISHIELD COVID-19 vaccines to add capillary leak syndrome as a potential side-effect.

Health Canada updates AstraZeneca vaccine label

No winning ticket for Lotto Max jackpot

No winning ticket for Lotto Max jackpot
There was no winning ticket sold for Tuesday's $55 million Lotto Max jackpot. The four Maxmillion prizes of $1 million also went unclaimed.

No winning ticket for Lotto Max jackpot

Ceremony marks residential school demolition

Ceremony marks residential school demolition
Survivors of a residential school in northern British Columbia have given the community strength and courage to keep pushing in a decades-long fight to demolish the building, says the deputy chief of the Daylu Dena Council.

Ceremony marks residential school demolition

Canadians prefer ties with U.S. over China: Pew

Canadians prefer ties with U.S. over China: Pew
The latest Pew Research Center survey found 87 per cent of 1,011 Canadian respondents see the U.S. as the better economic ally, up from 73 per cent in 2015.

Canadians prefer ties with U.S. over China: Pew

Peace Tower flag at half-mast on Canada Day: PM

Peace Tower flag at half-mast on Canada Day: PM
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he asked that the national flag on the Peace Tower remain at half-mast for Canada Day to honour the Indigenous children who died in residential schools.

Peace Tower flag at half-mast on Canada Day: PM

29 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

29 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
In total, 4,941,795 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., 1,368,464 of which are second doses.    

29 COVID19 cases for Tuesday