The Peterborough Examiner

Senators defy PM, delete escalator tax on booze from federal budget

- The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is challengin­g the assertion of senators that they have the right to amend or defeat any government bill — including the budget.

It has summarily and swiftly rejected Senate amendments to its budget implementa­tion bill, sending a message back to the upper house that the changes “infringe upon the rights and privileges” of the elected House of Commons, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has contended has sole authority and legitimacy to decide budgetary matters.

The message was sent, with unanimous approval of the Commons, less than three hours after the Senate gave final approval Wednesday to an amended version of the budget implementa­tion bill, deleting provisions that would impose a so-called escalator tax on booze.

Senators must now decide whether to insist upon their amendments or defer to the will of the elected chamber. In a sign of apparent confidence that senators will back down, government House leader Bardish Chagger served notice that the Commons would break for the summer at the end of Wednesday’s sitting.

However, opposition to the budget runs deep in the Senate.

While the Senate’s final approval of the amended bill was done by a simple voice vote Wednesday, senators voted 46-32 late Tuesday to accept the recommenda­tion of the Senate’s finance committee to delete the escalator tax. All 34 Conservati­ve senators in the chamber, three independen­ts and nine independen­t Liberal senators voted in favour of the committee report.

During final debate Wednesday, Sen. Joe Day, leader of the Liberal Senate caucus, reminded his colleagues that “it’s a long, long establishe­d right” of senators to amend or defeat government legislatio­n.

“We all know that it’s always controvers­ial if and when we choose to exercise that power. Government may like and value Senate amendments in theory but they rarely are so appreciati­ve when amendments are actually proposed and passed to their bills,” Day said.

“We in the Senate have a job to do and we mustn’t shy away from doing it.”

Serge Joyal, another independen­t Liberal senator, railed against the pressure the government has been putting on senators to pass the budget bill intact.

“I keep hearing in this chamber that, you know, we should yield to the other place (the Commons). You know, we’re not elected,” said Joyal.

“Well, I’m sorry. The structure of the Parliament of Canada is one elected (chamber), one appointed. That’s bicameral at its best.”

A number of senators variously referred to the escalator tax as “a tax grab,” a tax hike “in perpetuity” and “taxation without representa­tion.”

They worried that it would devastate small breweries and wineries and that it sets a dangerous precedent, allowing the government to hike taxes annually without having to get parliament­ary approval each year.

But the final debate made clear that’s not senators’ only objection to the budget.

Day and Joyal both detailed their opposition to a provision that would allow the government to borrow money without first getting the approval of Parliament.

Conservati­ve Senate leader Larry Smith also objected to the governance structure for the new infrastruc­ture bank, which gives cabinet the final approval over projects to be financed.

A motion to separate out the infrastruc­ture bank provisions into a separate bill for further study was defeated in the Senate on Monday.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Finance Minister Bill Morneau delivers the federal budget in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on March 22. The Senate has given final approval to the federal government’s budget — but with amendments that would delete the so-called...
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Finance Minister Bill Morneau delivers the federal budget in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on March 22. The Senate has given final approval to the federal government’s budget — but with amendments that would delete the so-called...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada