Penticton Herald

O’Toole making pitch to seniors on pensions

- By CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

OTTAWA — A day after throwing a line to private-sector union workers, Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole is digging in against what the party calls “corporate elites” in a pitch to seniors and working-class voters.

At an announceme­nt from his virtual broadcast studio in Ottawa, O’Toole pledged to give priority to pensioners over most other creditors during bankruptcy or restructur­ing proceeding­s.

He also said a Conservati­ve government would amend legislatio­n to prevent executives from paying themselves bonuses while steering a company through restructur­ing unless the pension plan is fully funded.

“As I’ve met with Canadian workers and labour unions across the country, I’ve heard the same thing over and over again: After working hard their whole career, people should be able to look forward to financial security in retirement,” he said. “Canadian workers who’ve paid into a pension plan on every paycheque should be able to rely on it actually being there when they retire.”

The party leader, who on Monday promised union representa­tion on federally regulated big companies’ boards, says workers have been forced to take major cuts to pensions when their former employer goes bankrupt, with Sears as a recent example.

The Canadian Labour Congress cast doubt on O’Toole’s pledge, citing his track record as a cabinet minister under Stephen Harper. The former prime minister cut the corporate tax rate to 15 per cent from 22 per cent and replaced lifetime pensions for wounded veterans with lump-sum payments that some ex-soldiers said resulted in less money, noted president Bea Bruske.

“Conservati­ve Erin O’Toole’s rhetoric just doesn’t match his record,” she said. “Time and time again Mr. O’Toole failed to support pensioners — and even wrote a law to make it easier for corporatio­ns to walk away from pension obligation­s.”

O’Toole tabled a private member’s bill in 2018 that he has said was meant to give pension administra­tors more leeway to preserve remaining funds and beef up returns for pensioners. It also sought to limit payments to executives during insolvenci­es, he said.

“But it would have actually allowed executive bonuses to rise by a factor of 10 once a company entered creditor protection,” Bruske stated.

O’Toole’s pension pitch has striking similariti­es to recent legislatio­n proposed by the New Democrats and builds on his push for trade union votes as he seeks to nab support from that party’s traditiona­l turf.

In December, NDP MP Scott Duvall tabled a basket of bills that sought to shore up worker protection­s, including around pensions and benefits in bankruptcy proceeding­s. The bill, which died on the order paper after the federal election was called for Sept. 20, would have required companies to provide terminatio­n and severance pay before secured creditors got their cash.

For seniors, the Liberals pledged $3 billion over five years in their budget from the spring to support long-term care and another $90 million over three years to help low-income seniors age at home.

New Democrats have proposed universal pharmacare and a national seniors strategy that would target dementia and elder abuse and suspend clawbacks to the guaranteed income supplement for low-income seniors who received emergency benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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