National Post (National Edition)

$75 a week for food is enough: Couillard

- SiDhartha Banerjee

MONTREAL • Quebec Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard is standing by his claim that $75 is enough for a family of three to feed itself for a week, saying it just requires a lot of work and an eye for bargains.

When presented the grocery question out of the blue Thursday by a radio host, Couillard answered it would be possible to feed an adult and two teenagers on that amount, acknowledg­ing later to reporters the menu would lack meat and variety.

Asked again Friday on Montreal’s 98.5 FM, Couillard said he wished people didn’t have to live on such a tight budget, but he knows some who do.

“You look through all the flyers, and you shop only for what is on sale,” Couillard said.

“It’s almost a full-time job.”

He gave the example of a roast pork bought on special that is used in macaroni the next day, shepherd’s pie the third day and sandwiches the day after.

One of the authors of Canada’s Food Price Report said $75 would not suffice.

Dalhousie University Prof. Sylvain Charlebois said that in 2017 the bare minimum grocery bill for a Quebec family of two adults and two children, including one teen, would have been $149 a week, double the amount in Couillard’s example for three people.

“If you live on your own, maybe, but if you have children in your home who are growing, it’s absolutely impossible,” Charlebois said.

The only way to make it work on $75 would be to resort to food banks, he said. Otherwise the family would “end up with a diet that has no variety, and the nutritiona­l value would be severely compromise­d.”

A Quebec family of four last year spent on average $233 a week on groceries, Charlebois said, the thirdmost per capita after Saskatchew­an and British Columbia.

Accused by his political opponents of being out of touch, Couillard told reporters Friday he did not regret his answer, adding the debate has shed a light on the need to fight poverty.

“No, I said the truth,” Couillard said.

“The question was, ’Is it feasible?’ Yes it’s feasible. I know people who do that. Is it good? No.”

It is not the first time a question about groceries has tripped up a politician.

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