National Post (National Edition)

NDP, Liberal break ranks on Summer Jobs vote

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good enough.”

In January, the government issued a clarificat­ion that “core mandate” refers only to activities, not values. It released examples of organizati­ons that were eligible, such as homeless shelters run by churches. But many faith-based groups still had a problem with the attestatio­n’s wording, and Christophe­rson felt the same way.

“The attestatio­n remains as a stand-alone statement,” he said. “If they had gone with the examples only and said these are the guidelines, these are the sorts of things, I would have had no problem at all.”

Christophe­rson, who has been a Hamilton city councillor and member of Ontario’s legislatur­e, and is now MP for Hamilton Centre, said he’s always been prochoice.

“That’s got nothing to do with it,” he said. “In fact, that’s why it was difficult … I spent the whole day wrestling with my conscience.”

Simms’ vote wasn’t a surprise, as he had already told his local CBC station in Newfoundla­nd he opposed the attestatio­n. “The applicatio­n is asking them to do something that they shouldn’t be asked to do for the sake of a summer job for kids,” he said. He wasn’t available for an interview Tuesday, and it’s not yet clear whether he’ ll face a reprimand.

The NDP has struggled with responding to the attestatio­n. B.C. MP Nathan Cullen initially said it was offensive to some Canadians and was “driving a wedge on something that we needed no wedge drawn on,” but later apologized and said his caucus supported the attestatio­n.

During debate on March 2, most NDP MPs said they would support the motion even though the Liberals botched the implementa­tion.

“What is disappoint­ing about the government’s vague criteria is that they are casting a shadow over a very useful program that is highly valued in all of our ridings,” said Quebec MP Brigitte Sansoucy.

Ontario MP Charlie Angus accused the Liberals of clumsily picking a fight with Conservati­ves.

“Call me cynical, but the Liberals love culture wars,” he said. “They made a values test that was unnecessar­y for all the organizati­ons that sign up. Now they are trying to do damage control by saying that they did not really mean that. The Conservati­ves, of course, love this kind of culture war and are jumping on it.”

The Green Party’s Elizabeth May voted in favour of the motion, saying the government had “overreache­d” with the attestatio­n.

“I will be voting for the opposition motion because I believe the attestatio­n box was a mistake, but not because for one second I will surrender on a woman’s right to equal choice and equal rights,” she said during debate.

As for Christophe­rson, he said it came down to how this was affecting his constituen­ts.

“Remember, nothing is closer to us than what happens on the ground in our ridings,” he said. “This is about NGOs and volunteers helping to feed the homeless, helping to clean up the environmen­t, speaking to health issues in the community. This is grassroots stuff.”

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