Medicine Hat News

Throne speech to talk short-, and long-term plans as cases rise, prompting PM address

- JORDAN PRESS

The federal Liberals’ throne speech Wednesday is to lay out plans for child care, health care, affordable housing and navigating the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The speech, crafted by the governing party but delivered by Gov. Gen. Julie Payette, will be given in the shadow of rising COVID-19 cases across the country, prompting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to deliver an unusual televised address of his own a few hours later.

Trudeau’s own speech will deliver a message to Canadians on the “urgency of fighting COVID-19” as the country faces a second wave of the pandemic, according to his office.

Trudeau will also speak about how the Liberals plan to combat COVID-19 with government action and to build the economic recovery from pandemic-related shutdowns earlier this year, repeating elements of the throne speech.

Payette is expected to add her own commentary to the throne speech about the pandemic, which will broadly be a message of hope for Canadians in these trying times, according to a source with knowledge of the additions who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about them.

What the Liberals have told various stakeholde­rs is to expect a two-step approach: promises of short-term help, mixed with references to a longer-term vision for the country.

For instance, sources who have knowledge of the government’s thinking on child care, and spoke on the condition of anonymity to detail private conversati­ons, said there is a much broader policy discussion behind the scenes about reforming the sector that the speech may allude to, while pledging more immediate help.

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce has asked the Liberals to establish a long-promised child care secretaria­t that would guide policy decisions, suggesting tax incentives for parents, guardians and daycare owners.

Martha Friendly, executive director of the Childcare Resource and Research Unit, a Toronto think-tank, says the pandemic has created a “eureka”’ moment for policy-makers about the necessity of child care to the country’s economic and social recovery.

“I hope there has also been the equally crucial ‘aha’ that the reliable, safe, high-quality child care families can count on in good times and bad depends on a transforma­tion of government policy, not just money alone - a bold, ambitious strategy,” she said.

Small businesses are hoping for a lifeline for companies that are barely hanging on. The Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business is hoping to see a rejigging of a commercial rent-assistance program that has fallen short of expectatio­ns, which the Liberals have hinted at doing.

“There are still hundreds of thousands of businesses that have received no government support at all,” said CFIB president Dan Kelly, noting it could be years before business revenues return to pre-pandemic levels, even as costs remain steady.

“They’re starting to fail and we’ve got to make sure that we can help bridge more of them to the finish line.”

There’s the possibilit­y of a bold statement on homelessne­ss and housing, which would disappoint people who want specifics.

“If it’s too broad of a statement then that’s frankly too much wiggle room,” said Jeff Morrison, executive director of the

Canadian Housing and Renewal Associatio­n.

Based on the signals going out, the speech will put promises into one of three buckets, said Elliot Hughes, who was an adviser to former finance minister Bill Morneau.

The first bucket will be about navigating the health crisis. Bucket 2 will be about holding up those who have had the financial floor fall from under them.

Bucket 3 will be big-picture vision statements, such as national child care, pharmacare and possibly creating a guaranteed minimum income, Hughes said.

“This is the Liberals’ plan for the time between now and election day,” said Hughes, now with consulting firm Summa Strategies.

“The speech is really the opening salvo in what is going to be the government’s pitch to Canadians.”

 ?? CP PHOTO SEAN
KILPATRICK ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a closing press conference on the third and final day of the Liberal cabinet retreat in Ottawa on Wednesday.
CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a closing press conference on the third and final day of the Liberal cabinet retreat in Ottawa on Wednesday.

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