Trudeau to meet provincial leaders
PM TO MEET LEADERS NEXT MONTH AS TENSIONS GROW
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will sit down with provincial and territorial leaders on March 13 to wrestle with some of the thorny issues that are dividing the nation.
The first ministers’ meeting, to be held in Ottawa, is to cover climate change, the economy, sustainable development of natural resources, health care, infrastructure and equalization and other federal transfer payments to the provinces.
First ministers will meet leaders of the Assembly of First Nations, the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the Metis National Council the day before.
The announcement of the meetings came Thursday as the Trudeau government continued struggling to balance the often competing demands of environmental concerns, resource development and reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples.
The Liberals are being blamed in some quarters for Teck Resources Ltd.’s decision earlier this week to back out of a new oilsands project in Alberta, citing uncertainty over climate policy.
The government is also taking heat for protests that continue to disrupt train service across the country in support of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs who are fighting a natural gas pipeline across their territory in northern British Columbia.
Those events have heightened tensions between the federal Liberal government and conservative premiers Jason Kenney and Scott Moe in Alberta and Saskatchewan, Canada’s oil and gas producing heartland.
And they’ve sparked concern that Canada’s economy could be headed into a tailspin.
Kenney and Moe maintain federal environmental policies are destroying their provinces’ economies and are demanding a fairer deal in Confederation.
Among other things, they have demanded an overhaul of the equalization program under which the federal government transfers money to have-not provinces to allow them to provide comparable services at comparable tax rates as richer provinces.