The Liberal cabinet is holding a retreat this week in Vancouver ahead of the fall parliamentary session and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs Dominic Leblanc said on Sept. 6 that the focus will be the economy.
“We’ve obviously heard in every part of the country the importance of working on economic measures that speak to affordability issues, that speak to things as important as the cost of housing, as dealing with a global phenomenon of inflation,” said Leblanc in a press conference.
Leblanc was asked by reporters what his government plans to do to address the issue of inflation that is hitting some Canadians hard, particularly in light of the federal Conservative Party deciding its new leader on Sept. 10. Presumed frontrunner Pierre Poilievre has focused on inflation and affordability issues during his campaign and in his previous role as finance critic.
“We’re not here to spend a lot of time worrying about who the Conservative Party will choose as their next leader,” said Leblanc.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last week that the government must be “careful” not to fuel the country’s spiking inflation rates as it moves to dampen the crisis.
When asked by reporters why the Liberal government had no new initiatives in recent months to combat the escalating cost of living, Tourism Minister Randy Boissonnault, who spoke alongside Leblanc, defended the government’s efforts.
“I’m going to push back a little bit on saying there’s ‘nothing new’ in the window,” Boissonnault said.
“Since budget [2022], $8.9 billion dollars in our affordability plan. We’re talking about a 10 percent increase in OAS [Old Age Security], we’re talking about a $500 credit for people struggling with housing, we’re also talking about indexation of all of our benefits.”
Pandemic Policy
Government spending on relief programs during the pandemic has been credited by some economists as creating the current inflationary bout.The Bank of Canada (BoC) has moved aggressively to attempt to take inflation back under control with oversized rate hikes.
Conservative Party MPs reacted to the hike, saying it would bring “more pain for Canadians struggling to keep up with record cost of living pressures.”
“Despite being warned that out-of-control spending would continue to put enormous upward pressure on inflation and interest rates, Justin Trudeau and his NDP allies have refused to change course,” wrote MPs Dan Albas and Gérard Deltell, respectively finance and industry critics, in a joint statement.