Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

NDP's Singh not itching to force an election

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2020 07:42 PM
  • NDP's Singh not itching to force an election

New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh says he’s not interested in forcing a federal election with a second wave of COVID-19 looming, if he can work with the Liberals to bring much-needed help to struggling Canadians.

Singh’s comments Friday were his clearest yet on whether the NDP plans to support the minority Liberal government’s throne speech next week. The speech will be followed by a confidence vote that the Liberals must win to keep governing.

The Liberals need the support of one party to carry on, and the fourth-place NDP have enough seats to make that happen.

Singh was to speak with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday afternoon, and he said he would make the case for the government to extend benefits for unemployed Canadians that the Liberals are planning to reduce.

"We are absolutely prepared to fight an election. But I want to be very clear about this point: it is not my goal to tear down government, it is not my goal to force an election," Singh said in a speech outside the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Que., with Parliament as his backdrop across the Ottawa River.

"But we know with the coming second wave, with the help that Canadians need right now, our focus in on making sure that families, working people, small businesses get the help they need."

In the speech, and in remarks to reporters afterwards, Singh accused his Liberal and Conservative counterparts of doing the bidding of big business during the pandemic.

Singh took aim at Trudeau and Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole as he laid out the NDP’s priorities. He told his supporters that his two main political rivals are essentially in the back pocket of big business and the "super rich," who he said have profited massively during the pandemic at the expense of working people.

"Megacompanies like Netflix and Amazon pay virtually no tax in Canada," he said.

"Tax loopholes and giveaways continue to let the richest Canadians get away without paying their fair share. This isn’t an accident. The system designed by the parties of Justin Trudeau and Erin O’Toole doesn’t work for working people. It works for the rich and powerful."

Later, when he was answering questions about whether he would support the government, Singh said: "The richest have made profits in this pandemic, but everyday people have actually felt the pain. And so we need to get help to them."

He made clear that unless the Liberals focus more on working people than on bigger corporate interests, his party’s support will evaporate.

"If the Liberal government continues down a path where they’re more interested in helping themselves, they get caught up in scandal, and they’re not willing to do what’s necessary … and they’re more worried about helping themselves, then we are prepared to fight an election."

Singh wants the Liberals to extend benefits for unemployed Canadians that he says they are planning to curtail.

He’s also called on the government to do more to help seniors, and address the crises in climate change and affordable housing.

MORE National ARTICLES

Countermeasures Were Key To Ending Tariff Stalemate With U.S., Says Trudeau

SEPT-ÎLES, Que. — Canada's retaliatory tariffs on American goods played a key role in restoring free access to the U.S. market for Canadian steel and aluminum, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says.

Countermeasures Were Key To Ending Tariff Stalemate With U.S., Says Trudeau

Deported Dangerous Offender Argues Charge That Would Keep Him In U.S. Jail Too Old

Deported Dangerous Offender Argues Charge That Would Keep Him In U.S. Jail Too Old
The prosecutor says Shrubsall's arguments are weak, given that he is accused of fleeing his own trial in May 1996, leaving behind a suicide note before he disappeared into Canada.

Deported Dangerous Offender Argues Charge That Would Keep Him In U.S. Jail Too Old

Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures

Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures
HAMILTON — Ontario researchers say they've come up with a way to store vaccines at higher temperatures for weeks at a time.    

Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures

Mother Manjit Kaur Deo Of Accused Charged As Accessory In 2017 Murder Of B.C. Woman Kiran Dhesi

Mother Manjit Kaur Deo Of Accused Charged As Accessory In 2017 Murder Of B.C. Woman Kiran Dhesi
 The mother of a man accused of the second-degree murder of a British Columbia woman has been charged with accessory after the fact to murder.

Mother Manjit Kaur Deo Of Accused Charged As Accessory In 2017 Murder Of B.C. Woman Kiran Dhesi

Liberals Shrugging Off Concerns About Rural Crime, Opposition MPs Charge

Liberals Shrugging Off Concerns About Rural Crime, Opposition MPs Charge
onservative MPs say a Liberal-dominated committee's half-hearted report on the burgeoning problem of rural crime is an insult to Canadians.

Liberals Shrugging Off Concerns About Rural Crime, Opposition MPs Charge

Regulator Investigating High Gas Prices In B.C. Has Power To Examine Gouging

British Columbia's independent energy regulator will have the power to call oil company representatives as witnesses into an investigation of high gasoline prices in the province.

Regulator Investigating High Gas Prices In B.C. Has Power To Examine Gouging