Conservatives blast Liberal budget as NDP strives to balance criticism with support - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:39 AM | Calgary | -13.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Conservatives blast Liberal budget as NDP strives to balance criticism with support

Conservative interim leader Candice Bergen said Thursday that Canada'smost pressing problems aren't addressed in the new federal budget which she claimed had been heavily influenced by NDP ideology.

Jagmeet Singh said New Democrats will vote in favour of the budget

A blonde haired woman speaks at a podium.
Interim Leader of the Conservative Party Candice Bergen speaks to media following the release of the federal budget on Parliament Hill on Thursday. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Conservative interim leader Candice Bergen said Thursday that Canada's most pressing problems aren't addressed in the new federal budget which she claimed had been heavily influenced by NDP ideology.

"We were looking for controlled spending, which would in turn control inflation," Bergen told reporters outside the House of Commons after the budget was tabled.

"It is an irresponsible budget. It is a typical, classic,NDP spend-and-tax budget."

The plan tabled by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland today commits billions of dollars to improving housing affordability and to environmental programs that could speed up Canada's transition to a greener economy.

You can read in-depth coverage of the 2022 budget and its most significant initiatives below:

Bergen said the Liberal housing plan moves too slowly and will not help any Canadians afford a new home this year.

Despite increased spending in several areas including for the military and a national dental program the budget also forecasts a deficit of $52.8 billion in 2022-23, about half of what it was last year.

Bergen called onCanadians to notbe fooled by the apparentimprovement in Canada's fiscal outlook. She accusedthe Liberals of years of poor fiscal management even before the pandemic struck.

"We're like the frog that's being slowly boiled. We've become so accustomed to these huge numbers we don't realize how bad they are," she said.

WATCH: Candice Bergen reacts to the 2022 budget on CBC's Power & Politics

Liberal budget is "textbook NDP - it's tax and spend': Bergen

2 years ago
Duration 10:07
Interim Conservative Leader Candice Bergen joined Power & Politics Thursday to discuss the Liberal government's first budget since last year's federal election.

NDP takes some credit

Political reaction to the new budget was predictable both the Conservatives and Bloc Qubcois said within minutes of the budget's tabling that they would vote against it but the New Democrats are in an unusual position.

The party has promised to support the minority Liberal government until at least 2024 as part of a recently signed "supply and confidence" agreement, so long as the government delivers on some NDP priorities.

In his reaction to the budget, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh tried simultaneously to criticize the document while also taking credit for some of the things in it.

WATCH: Jagmeet Singh says NDP will support the budget despite some disagreements

NDP will support budget but leader Jagmeet Singh says Liberals are 'doing things that we don't agree with'

2 years ago
Duration 7:54
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh joins Power & Politics to share his perspective on the federal budget the first since the Liberals signed a confidence and supply deal with his party.

He said the budget's commitment to a national dental care program is a clear example of his party's influence. Singh also cited the government's plan to tackle the housing affordability crisis as further evidence that New Democrats are shapingfederal policy in a positive way.

"We see that reflected in the budget, with concrete steps that would not have been therebut for the fact that we forced the government to deliver," Singh said.

Still, most of the budget's key housing commitments including a ban on foreign buyers and a program to jump-start new construction were included in the Liberals' 2021 election campaign.

Environmental programs inadequate, opposition says

The NDPwas more willing to criticize thebudget's plans for climate change and the environment.Singh said he was "deeply concerned" by those measures.

The budget promises $2.6 billion over five years for a new tax credit for carbon capture a technology that can sequester carbon from the atmospherebut has not been shown to be effective on a large scale.

Bloc Qubcois Leader Yves-Franois Blanchet said the government is not doing enough to promote truly green industries to address the climate crisis.

'Its so thin, it looks like a Conservative budget,' said Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet after comparing the size of the last budget to the new one. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

"I believe this government intends to be the instrument of the oil and gas industry," he said. "The difference between this government and the Conservatives is that the Conservatives would admit it."

The budget will create a new arms-length agency the Canada Growth Fund that will be capitalized initially with $15 billion to stimulate growth in low-carbon industries and help with the country's transition to net-zero.

Conservative leadership rivalsfocus on the economy

Candidates jockeying to become the next permanent Conservative leader also blasted the budget.

MP Pierre Poilievre said the new spending commitments will worsen the recent rise in inflation, which heblamesalmost entirely onthe Liberal government's spending habits.

"When your house is on fire, you don't douse it in gasoline," Poilievre said in a media statement.

Former Quebec premier Jean Charest also focused his criticism on what he called the lack of "fiscal discipline" in the budget. As prime minister, he said, he would instilthat discipline in Ottawa while preserving social programs that help Canadians.

"The Liberals talk big game about sustainability, yet they offer none when it comes to our economy," Charest said in a media statement.

Jimmy Jean, the chief economist at Desjardins, said the best way to tackle rising inflation isthrough the introduction of higher interest rates something over whichthe federal government is not supposed to have direct control.

"I think it was the right choice to stay fairly hands-off with regards to inflation and let the Bank of Canada do its job," he told CBC News.

Clarifications

  • This story has been updated from a previous version to remove the word "theoretically" in reference to carbon capture technology's ability to sequester carbon from the atmosphere. While the large-scale feasibility of such technology is still questioned, CCS is in use at several locations around the world.
    Apr 11, 2022 4:38 PM ET