Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Premiers issue wish list for federal throne speech

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2020 07:55 PM
  • Premiers issue wish list for federal throne speech

Four conservative-minded premiers have issued their wish list for next week's throne speech on which the fate of Justin Trudeau's minority Liberal government could hinge.

More federal funding for health care is at the top of the list.

"We're in desperate need of your support," Ontario Premier Doug Ford said in his message to the federal government on Friday.

He was joined by Quebec Premier François Legault, Alberta's Jason Kenney and Brian Pallister of Manitoba, who held a news conference in Ottawa to spell out what they hope to see in the speech.

The premiers said they want to see the federal share of health-care funding grow from 22 per cent to 35 per cent, which Ford said would amount to about $70 billion.

"It is time for the federal government to do its fair share," Legault said in French.

The premiers are also calling on Ottawa to ease the requirements to access the fiscal stabilization program, which provides help to provinces facing a year-over-year decline in non-resource revenues.

The program has not changed since 1995.

"Alberta's been there for Canada," Kenney said at the news conference.

"Now Canada has to be there for Alberta and other provinces that are facing the greatest economic and fiscal challenge since the Great Depression."

The premiers also want to see the federal government put more money into infrastructure.

Ford and Legault had last week called on Ottawa to significantly increase the annual federal transfer payments to provinces and territories for health care.

The transfer this year will amount to almost $42 billion under an arrangement that sees it increase by at least three per cent each year.

On top of that, the federal government is giving provinces and territories $19 billion to help them cope with the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, including some $10 billion for health care.

Legault and Ford argued that added federal funding is needed to cope with the mushrooming costs of delivering health care beyond the financial burden imposed by the pandemic.

The throne speech is expected to include three main priorities: measures to protect Canadians' health and avoid another national lockdown; economic supports to help keep Canadians financially afloat while the pandemic continues; and longer-term measures to eventually rebuild the economy.

In particular, it is expected to promise more health-care funding — including for long-term care homes that have borne the brunt of the more than 9,000 deaths from COVID-19 in Canada — and for child care so that women, hardest hit by the shutdown, can go back to work.

MORE National ARTICLES

Without Indigenous Consent For Pipelines, Expect More Confrontations

Canadians can expect more disruptive protests if the federal government pushes forward with the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion against the wishes of some of the Indigenous communities it will pass through, says a British Columbia lawyer and Indigenous negotiator.

Without Indigenous Consent For Pipelines, Expect More Confrontations

Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At B.c. Legislature 'Counterproductive'

B.C. Premier John Horgan questions what is being achieved by ongoing protests at the legislature, but he won't ask dozens of people camped at the building's ceremonial gates to leave.

Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At B.c. Legislature 'Counterproductive'

Five Protesters Arrested At British Columbia Legislature Wednesday Night

VICTORIA - Police say five people have been arrested following a protest at the British Columbia legislature.    

Five Protesters Arrested At British Columbia Legislature Wednesday Night

Amber Alert Issued For 14-Year-Old Boy Shammah Jolayemi Abducted In Toronto, Police Say

An Amber Alert has been issued for a 14-year-old boy who Toronto police say was abducted in the northwestern part of the city.

Amber Alert Issued For 14-Year-Old Boy Shammah Jolayemi Abducted In Toronto, Police Say

Sting Investigation: Unlicensed Practitioner MARIA EZZATI Caught Giving Injections At 'Botox And Filler Party'

The search was conducted on February 20, 2020 by private investigators accompanied by Vancouver police officers.

Sting Investigation: Unlicensed Practitioner MARIA EZZATI Caught Giving Injections At 'Botox And Filler Party'

Syrian Toddler Who Laughed At Bombs Reaches Turkey With Family

The three-year-old Syrian girl, who was taught by her father to laugh at the sound of bombs so that she would not be afraid, has reached safety in Turkey, reports said on Wednesday.    

Syrian Toddler Who Laughed At Bombs Reaches Turkey With Family