While many are exultant over the fact that Mark Carney's Liberals now have a majority government, I have always been of the opinion that when it comes to such feats, you should be careful what you wish for. Such a government, of course, has the power to enact a progressive vision, but it also has the power to ignore that vision, conveniently forgetting the people who conferred that majority.
I fear the latter is what is happening with our 'new' government, which seems more interested in pursuing the favour of the powerful instead of assuaging the plight of the powerless.
Althia Raj writes that despite lofty Liberal rhetoric, the details of the latest economic update tell a different story:
... dig into the details and you learn national pharmacare is ending. There is no new money to create more child care spaces. Federal health-care spending is drastically being cut. Oh, and the government is looking at privatizing airports and ports — moves prime minister Stephen Harper didn’t even publicly contemplate.
Our last government, thanks to its minority status, was more responsive to the needs of the people.
Two years ago, prime minister Justin Trudeau announced with much fanfare the “first phase of a national pharmacare plan,” $1.5 billion over five years to cover a range of free contraception and life-saving diabetes medications. The plan — crafted under pressure from the NDP — was to study the initial roll out, and expand coverage to more drugs in the future. Trudeau said national pharmacare would strengthen the social safety net, and help Canadians get the care they needed.
Only British Columbia, Manitoba, Prince Edward Island and the Yukon signed deals before Trudeau left office. Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador who now want access to the program are finding Carney is dragging its feet. Although he said in September he would act “as quickly and as equitably as possible” to finalize deals, and approximately $600 million is left in the pot, Health Minister Marjorie Michel’s office spoke Friday only of “honouring existing pharmacare agreements.”
Indeed, even for those provinces that signed on, it seems the agreements are only in place until 2029, after which, given their absence in budgets and updates, they will end.
But the news gets even worse.
The federal government is also slashing billions from health care — at a time when hospital emergency rooms are swamped, the population is aging, and mental health needs are too often left unmet.
It also looks like the $500 million annually set aside to increase Canadians access to expensive drugs for rare diseases won’t extend beyond next March.
Child care, another program widely touted by Liberals, will also see cuts. The $625 million Early Learning and Child Care Infrastructure Fund will sunset next year, and while the Carney government plans to renew the Canada-wide early learning and child care (CWELCC) transfers to the provinces, they won’t increase beyond what Trudeau negotiated his last week in office. Funding will, in fact, be $1.1 billion less than what the Grits promised back in 2021, when they pledged “a minimum of $9.2 billion per year ongoing” to keep the program alive.
Mark Carney, in his previous existence, moved in very rarified circles, many of which were repositories of the elite. And it appears the elites are his true constituency. Take, for example, his recent musing of 'unlocking the value' of our airports through privatization. Take also his creation of the Canada Strong Fund which, as far as I can tell, is simply another iteration of public-private partnerships, which usually means the public takes all the risks and financial liabilities, while the private sector enjoys the profits.
Hubris is an all too familiar foe. It blinds our 'leaders' to the harsh realities many people contend with on a daily basis. Unfortunately, there is little opportunity to fight it, except once every four years or so. And even then, our traditionally low election turnouts suggest it is a very weak cudgel indeed.