Pharmacare tops Grit wish list
Convention sets out plans for big ideas to take into next election
HALIFAX — As the federal Liberals start their search for the big ideas that will fuel their reelection campaign next year, their policy convention in Halifax this weekend has made at least one thing clear: pharmacare is front of mind.
Even before delegates voted the creation of a national, universal pharmacare program as their top priority, it was clearly the policy that generated the most excitement on the convention floor.
The Liberals know they face a challenge in the 2019 election. Burdened with the baggage of governing — and having broken some of their promises — how can they rekindle the “Real Change” energy and optimism that was so successful for them in 2015?
“We (won) by having the courage to present new ideas to Canadians about the economy, about how to create good, middle class jobs in the 21st century,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a campaign-style speech to the convention on Saturday. But he closed with an acknowledgment that new ideas are needed once again.
“We have every right to be proud of our accomplishments as a movement and as a country,” he said. “But it didn’t happen by accident and it won’t continue without effort.”
The Liberal delegates — particularly the party’s youth wing, represented by nearly a quarter of the 3,000 registered to attend — used the convention to push a roster of progressive policy resolutions: pharmacare, decriminalization of all drugs (voted the third-highest priority), decriminalizing the sex trade (voted fourth), creating a guaranteed minimum income (voted sixth).
Yet despite assurances from cabinet ministers in attendance that they were “open to the discussion,” some of those resolutions were clearly dead in the water — at least for now. Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor had already rejected the notion of decriminalizing drugs before the convention began, and Trudeau did the same on Saturday.
“On that particular issue, as I’ve said, it’s not part of our plans,” he told reporters.
That stands in stark contrast to pharmacare, on which significant preparatory work is already underway in government.
The spring budget funded a federal advisory council on pharmacare headed up by Eric Hoskins, who resigned as Ontario’s health minister to take the job. Just last week, the all-party House of Commons health committee tabled a report that recommended a universal single-payer program.