Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Liberals announce cost-of-living help

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Sep, 2022 09:59 AM
  • Liberals announce cost-of-living help

SAINT ANDREWS, N.B. - Liberal cabinet ministers said Tuesday the government is listening to Canadians who are struggling under the weight of inflation and entirely dismissed criticism from the new Conservative leader that they are part of a "radical woke coalition."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau officially announced the first policies to directly respond to the cost-of-living crisis spurred by an inflation rate that has averaged almost six per cent between January and July.

Until now, the government has said it is helping through existing policies, such as child care agreements with the provinces and automatic annual increases to programs like the GST rebate and Canada Child Benefit, as well as 2021 budget promises to increase benefits for seniors and low-income workers.

Trudeau will now outline a plan to double the GST benefit, introduce a temporary dental care benefit for most families with children under 12, and provide a one-time $500 payment for low-income renters.

"We spent a lot of time listening to Canadians from coast to coast to coast this summer," Trudeau said Monday, in his opening speech to his caucus at a Liberal retreat in St. Andrews, N.B.

"We heard from parents who are worried that the high cost of groceries or eating into their savings. We heard from nurses and health-care workers, stretched, working harder than ever, feeling ground down and undervalued."

The Liberals were wary of introducing too much money into the economy to avoid driving up demand and making inflation worse. They were warned against it by several economists, including just last week by CIBC World Markets chief economist Avery Shenfeld.

He noted provinces have already begun wide-scale handouts to appease voters concerned by inflation, and warned the federal government shouldn't follow suit.

"Unless very narrowly targeted to only reach those in the most need of support to put food on the table, or even better, financed by offsetting spending cuts elsewhere, they add to the inflation pressure in the economy by increasing spending power," Shenfeld said.

Tuesday's federal announcements are targeted at lower and moderate-income Canadians.

The new inflation response plan was supposed to have been unveiled last week during a Liberal cabinet retreat in Vancouver but was delayed following the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

The Liberals have been criticized by opposition parties for months for not stepping up earlier.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said in an interview that many people are going into debt to keep food on the table, and then paying higher interest rates on that debt because the Bank of Canada is raising interest rates to try and tamp down inflation.

"If you recall, as early as May we were saying to the government … those are two pressures that just make it harder for people who are already feeling squeezed. It just makes it worse," he said.

While the price of gasoline began to ease in June, the cost of basic necessities including food is up as much as 10 per cent compared to a year ago, and housing costs have also soared since the pandemic.

The new policies are all drawn from demands made by the NDP — including two that the Liberals have committed to as part of the supply and confidence agreement reached by the two parties last March.

Under that deal, the NDP agreed to support the minority government on key votes in return for the Liberals enacting some NDP priorities. Dental care and the housing benefit are explicitly included.

The NDP has also been asking the Liberals to double the GST rebate and expand the Canada Child Benefit, though those demands are not part of the deal.

"We think this is a starting point," Singh said of the announcement.

"It's something that we had fought for and we forced them to do. They would not have done this but for us, and they're not going to be able to get it passed but for us in the House. We're gonna need to have some legislation to make it happen. But we still think that (there are) other steps needed."

New Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is heavily critical of the supply and confidence deal, calling the Liberals and NDP a "radical woke coalition."

Liberal cabinet ministers at the retreat in New Brunswick rejected that notion.

"Frankly, I don't even know what it means to be woke," said Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, headed into the final day of caucus meetings Tuesday.

"I'm working to serve Canadians, and Canadians have asked us for three elections in a row to do more and to do it faster when it comes to fighting climate change."

Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne said he is not woke, "and trust me, no one in my family believes that either."

He said the Liberal team is "fully committed to work on three things: the economy, the economy, the economy."

"That's what matters to Canadians," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. officer stabbed, but recovering from wounds

B.C. officer stabbed, but recovering from wounds
Police say when the officer was speaking to the complainant, the man fled into the home and the officer was stabbed after he followed. The release says the officer was able to take the man, who was known to the complainant, into custody and drive himself and the suspect to hospital.

B.C. officer stabbed, but recovering from wounds

Fugitive back in custody after causing multi-car collision

Fugitive back in custody after causing multi-car collision
A Vancouver Police officer was patrolling near Main Street and Terminal Avenue when he attempted to stop a vehicle that was allegedly driven by a 29-year-old man with 10 Canada-wide warrants, including charges for firearms and drug trafficking.

Fugitive back in custody after causing multi-car collision

Liberals ready another budget under cloudy outlook

Liberals ready another budget under cloudy outlook
Three-decade-high inflation rates may climb further. Unemployment is low, but labour shortages are widespread. Housing prices continue to rise at paces not seen in years.

Liberals ready another budget under cloudy outlook

One dead in Surrey apartment building fire

One dead in Surrey apartment building fire
Surrey RCMP were called to the building on 107a Ave. near King George Blvd. at about 8:20 p.m. Upon arrival, officers found a lower floor suite fully engulfed in flames, and began evacuating the building.    

One dead in Surrey apartment building fire

Woman pleads guilty after child's death in daycare

Woman pleads guilty after child's death in daycare
The British Columbia Prosecution Service says Susy Yasmine Saad entered the guilty plea in court on Monday to a single count affecting nine children, including one child who died.

Woman pleads guilty after child's death in daycare

Victim assualted with a hatchet and robbed of their bag

Victim assualted with a hatchet and robbed of their bag
At this time it is believed this was an unprovoked attack and the victim and suspect are not known to each other. The charges of one count of Aggravated Assault and one count of robbery against 30 year old Abdulkadir Hassan of Burnaby have been approved by Crown Counsel. 

Victim assualted with a hatchet and robbed of their bag