The Province

Scheer, Trudeau Commons clash touches on terrorism

OPPOSITION: Proposed infrastruc­ture bank also draws ire

- BRIAN PLATT

For the first time since he was elected prime minister, Justin Trudeau squared off in Parliament on Monday against the adversary who will lead the official Opposition into the next election.

It was also the first chance for Canadians to see the key battle in the new political landscape: 38-year-old Andrew Scheer, elected as Conservati­ve leader on May 27, taking on the 45-year-old Trudeau — a showdown delayed due to Trudeau’s trip to Europe last week for NATO and G7 meetings.

But the question period clash, normally a highly charged theatrical affair, started on a sombre, non-partisan note, as Scheer asked the prime minister for an update on the terrorist attack in London on Saturday that killed seven, including Christine Archibald of Castlegar, B.C.

Scheer took the opportunit­y to encourage Canadians to take up the call of Archibald’s family and “volunteer their time and labour, or donate to a homeless shelter, and tell them Christine sent you.” Archibald worked at a homeless shelter in Calgary before moving to Europe.

Trudeau, who had spoken to British Prime Minister Theresa May earlier in the day, expressed his condolence­s to the Archibalds and said Canada “stands in solidarity with the British people.”

The solemn exchange then promptly turned to the usual question period fare, with Scheer aggressive­ly accusing Trudeau of deceiving Canadians over the proposed infrastruc­ture bank.

With the government focused on getting its budget bill through Parliament before the summer break, the legislatio­n is the main subject of opposition ire at the moment — and particular­ly the Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank contained within.

The bank’s goal is to get expensive, nationally significan­t infrastruc­ture built without relying entirely on public debt to pay for it. Instead, the government would inject just enough money to lower the risk to the point where private-sector firms were willing to invest in it. Scheer’s Conservati­ves have so far taken a hard line against it, arguing the Liberals are “co-signing loans for the richest one per cent,” with taxpayers on the hook for projects gone bad.

Concerns have been raised that the bank is vulnerable to political manipulati­on, that it interferes in provincial jurisdicti­on, and that its enabling legislatio­n is being rushed through Parliament too quickly. It’s expected some senators will push to separate the bank from the budget bill for deeper examinatio­n.

Government officials held a technical briefing on the bank on Monday, saying it would be an optional funding tool for certain revenue-generating projects (such as transporta­tion projects with fares or tolls, or electrical or water infrastruc­ture).

But Scheer, along with the NDP, spent question period demanding it be halted. “The prime minister’s billionair­e friends have talked him into the infrastruc­ture bank,” Scheer said. “It is not too late to do the right thing. He can listen to those who have raised serious concerns about this $35-billion boondoggle waiting to happen.”

Trudeau responded that “drawing in private capital from around the world will get more things built for Canadians, will grow our economy, and create a better future for our kids.”

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responds during question period in the House of Commons on Monday, as Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer, left, looks on.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responds during question period in the House of Commons on Monday, as Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer, left, looks on.

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