Penticton Herald

Liberals highlight contrast with Conservati­ves on abortion, guns

- By JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau aimed Wednesday to distinguis­h the Liberals from Erin O’Toole’s Conservati­ves with promises to enshrine abortion services in the Canada Health Act and toughen measures to ban an array of firearms.

The pledges came in a Liberal re-election platform with $78 billion in new spending, more than three times the direct new revenues promised over the next five years.

During a campaign stop in Toronto, Trudeau called the platform a detailed and responsibl­e plan that would chart a course out of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“This is the plan that Canada needs to be even more ambitious,” he said.

“These are the things that allow Canada to move forward, and that’s the choice I’m putting forward to Canadians right now.”

O’Toole and the NDP’s Jagmeet Singh, meanwhile, chided the Liberals for making big promises but not following through with action.

“I want to remind folks the Liberals have taken this strategy again and again,” Singh said. “Why deliver on things when you can just campaign on it anyways? Why get things done when you can just promise it?”

O’Toole outlined a plan to build key infrastruc­ture, end delays and get shovels in the ground for world-class public transit, roads and 5G telecom networks.

He accused the Liberals of sitting on billions of unspent money.

“Justin Trudeau loves making promises,” O’Toole said in Ottawa. “He’s had years of announcing and reannounci­ng the money he planned to spend. But six years later, he has little to show for it.”

Trudeau accentuate­d policies that set him apart from the Conservati­ves, emphasizin­g the Liberal plan to work with the provinces toward $10-a-day child care and ensure federal public servants and people travelling by plane or train are vaccinated against COVID-19.

The Liberal leader tried to put even more policy distance between himself and O’Toole with the new platform promises on guns and abortion.

In 2020 the Liberals banned the use, sale and importatio­n of more than 1,500 models of what they consider assault-style weapons.

Legislatio­n introduced last February proposed a buyback of these firearms, with

owners allowed to keep them under strict conditions including registrati­on and secure storage of the guns.

The Liberal platform suggests the bill, which died at the election call, would be amended to make it mandatory for owners of the banned weapons to either sell them back to the government or have them rendered inoperable at the government’s expense.

The bill also would have given municipali­ties the power to ban handguns. The Liberals are now saying they would expand that authority to entire provinces or territorie­s, a plan that still falls short for those who wanted a truly national ban to avoid a patchwork of handgun laws.

The Liberals have earmarked $1 billion to help provinces that move to ban handguns in 2022.

The Conservati­ve election platform says the party would scrap the May 2020 ban on a wide variety of guns and review the Firearms Act with input from police, gun owners, manufactur­ers and the public.

On abortion, the Liberals plan to leave no room for doubt it is a medically necessary procedure under the Canada Health Act by including it in a regulation.

The promise comes after New Brunswick saw its health transfer payments clawed back by about $140,000 this year for charging fees for abortion at a private clinic.

“Canada is a country where we stand up for women’s rights,” Trudeau said. “And I will not allow others to limit those rights.”

Singh campaigned in Quebec, where his party is hoping to boost its seat count following a dismal showing in the last federal election.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole sips a beer while campaignin­g at a craft beer brewery.
The Canadian Press Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole sips a beer while campaignin­g at a craft beer brewery.

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