Lethbridge Herald

Uncertaint­y over budget bill persists

SENATORS DEFY TRUDEAU, PROPOSE AMENDMENTS TO FEDERAL BUDGET BILL

- Joan Bryden THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

ASenate committee voted Tuesday to delete a so-called escalator tax on alcohol from the federal government’s budget, defying Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s insistence that only the elected House of Commons has authority over budgetary matters.

The Senate’s national finance committee passed a series of amendments to the budget implementa­tion bill, all aimed at removing the government’s plan to increase the federal excise tax on beer, wine and spirits automatica­lly by the rate of inflation each year.

The amendments came less than 24 hours after the Senate narrowly defeated a motion that would have carved out provisions dealing with the creation of a new infrastruc­ture bank into a separate bill.

The committee — whose membership includes independen­t Sen. Andre Pratte, author of the motion to split the bill — did not propose any changes to the infrastruc­ture bank provisions.

However, the bill, as now amended by the committee, must still be put to a vote by the Senate as a whole, where individual senators could opt to propose additional changes.

The House of Commons would have to concur with any changes approved by the Senate, something Trudeau has made clear is not in the cards.

But the prime minister’s warning that unelected senators have no business rewriting a budget doesn’t hold water for some senators. Although the Senate can’t initiate a money bill, it does have the right to amend one — or even defeat it outright, as happened in 1993, they note.

“I believe that the Senate does have the right to amend finance bills, not to raise taxes but to otherwise amend them,” independen­t Liberal Sen. Joan Fraser said Tuesday.

Pratte said he may yet support some amendments to the bill, but won’t propose any more himself on the infrastruc­ture bank. The debate and vote on his motion convinced him that a majority of senators have no appetite for changing the bill.

“There’s no use working on amendments when you know the majority of the Senate will reject those amendments.”

In any event, since Trudeau has been clear that any changes approved by the Senate would be rejected by the Liberal majority in the Commons, Pratte predicted most senators will eventually wind up bowing to the will of the elected chamber.

“It’s obvious that this is not one of those special circumstan­ces where the Senate would insist on its amendments,” he said. “It’s pretty obvious that the Senate would defer to the government’s will.”

The government maintains the $35billion infrastruc­ture bank is an integral part of its economic plan. It is to be launched with $15 billion in direct federal investment­s and another $20 billion in repayable contributi­ons, loans and loan guarantees. The government hopes to leverage up to $5 in private investment for every $1 in government funding to finance what it calls “transforma­tional” infrastruc­ture projects.

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