Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP pledges support for small businesses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2021 07:43 PM
  • NDP pledges support for small businesses

Jagmeet Singh is promising that a federal NDP government would provide more support for small businesses struggling during the pandemic, including paying a bonus to companies that hire new employees or bring back those who have been laid off.

Singh unveiled the promises during a campaign-style event in British Columbia on Tuesday, less than a week after he said the New Democrats would not provoke an election as long as the COVID-19 pandemic persists.

The federal NDP leader said last week that his party would support the minority Liberal government on confidence votes in the House of Commons during the pandemic. Parties are nonetheless preparing for an election that could come at any time.

The hiring bonus proposed by the NDP would see the federal government cover the portion of employment insurance and Canada Pension Plan contributions normally paid by employers for new staff that are hired or staff rehired after being laid off.

The NDP did not provide an estimate for how much that or any of the other measures announced on Tuesday are expected to cost the government.

However, the government announced in September that it was freezing employment insurance rates for employers for the next two years with the pandemic. The move was expected to save businesses and employees about $1 billion this year.

Singh also promised to extend the federal government’s existing wage subsidy, rent assistance and business loan programs until the end of the pandemic, while also making it easier for businesses to access those relief programs.

The wage subsidy is currently set to expire in June, but the Liberal government has extended it several times since it was first unveiled last April. It also expanded the amount of support following complaints from business and opposition parties.

Singh is also highlighting an earlier promise to impose what he describes as an “excess profit tax” on companies that have benefited during the pandemic, though the NDP has yet to provide details on exactly how that will work.

The federal NDP has unveiled campaign promises on a number of different fronts over the past few weeks as parties prepare for a possible election.

MORE National ARTICLES

Champagne to meet Belarus opposition leader

Champagne to meet Belarus opposition leader
Champagne will meet with representatives of the secretary-general of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which is calling for peaceful negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia after the recent flare-up their long dispute over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Champagne to meet Belarus opposition leader

Green leader asks Trudeau to suspend byelections

Green leader asks Trudeau to suspend byelections
Annamie Paul, who took the reins of the Green Party of Canada last Saturday, is also the party's candidate in the Oct. 26 byelection in Toronto Centre.

Green leader asks Trudeau to suspend byelections

Conservatives criticize assisted-dying bill

Conservatives criticize assisted-dying bill
The Liberal government last week introduced a bill that would amend the law on medical assistance in dying to bring it into compliance with a Quebec court ruling last fall.

Conservatives criticize assisted-dying bill

Feds double pandemic aid for food banks

Feds double pandemic aid for food banks
The first phase of the program funded 1,800 projects, providing an estimated six million meals to two million Canadians.

Feds double pandemic aid for food banks

MEC to lay off fewer employees following sale

MEC to lay off fewer employees following sale
The Vancouver-based company says that 85 per cent of its active workforce will remain on the job once the deal closes, up from a minimum of 75 per cent that Kingswood Capital Management Ltd previously indicated.

MEC to lay off fewer employees following sale

Vancouver approves homeless action plan

Vancouver approves homeless action plan
Many of the potential sites will need renovation, so council also approved plans for the immediate use of a city-owned motel and a hostel on Vancouver's west side.

Vancouver approves homeless action plan