Lethbridge Herald

As pharmacare deadline looms, Singh mulls a future without NDP’s deal with Liberals

- Laura Osman

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is mulling what it would mean if the supply-and-confidence deal that ties his party to the Liberals should end prematurel­y.

The deal is poised to fall apart if the parties can’t agree on legislatio­n that would set the foundation for a future pharmacare plan by the end of the month.

“My sense right now is I don’t know which way it’s going,” Singh said at a press conference in Ottawa on Tuesday.

The NDP signed a political pact with the Liberals in 2022 to support the government on key votes in exchange for progress on shared priorities such as pharmacare.

The Liberals agreed to table and pass pharmacare legislatio­n by the end of 2023, but negotiatio­ns over its contents stalled and the parties extended the deadline to March 1 in hopes of reaching an agreement.

Singh’s hopes appeared to be fading Tuesday as he explained what the NDP’s relationsh­ip with the minority government will look like if the deal dies next month.

The NDP wouldn’t automatica­lly support the passage of government bills, and the Liberals would have to negotiate with them every time they want support, Singh said.

“That doesn’t mean we can’t find ways to pass other bills that we still support. That doesn’t mean that we can’t continue to push ... things like the anti-scab legislatio­n that we want to see happen,” he said.

In other words, the other elements of the agreement aren’t necessaril­y doomed if the deal falls apart.

When it comes to major votes that could trigger a snap election, such as on the budget, Singh said the NDP would have to figure it out on a case-by-case basis.

“If the agreement’s not in place, we’re saying that none of our votes should be taken for granted,” he said.

Both parties have been dragged down in the polls recently as Conservati­ves soar to popularity, but the NDP insists electoral politics aren’t putting the deal at risk.

Instead, Singh said the divide is all about the approach to a future pharmacare deal.

The New Democrats have insisted they won’t support a bill that doesn’t reflect a universal, single-payer system.

“There is a bit of a philosophi­cal problem here, and that’s that the NDP is committed to single-payer pharmacare and the Liberals are not. And that’s why we don’t have legislatio­n,” said NDP health critic Don Davies, who has been leading the negotiatio­n for his party.

Health Minister Mark Holland has raised concerns about committing to the future cost of such a program, even if the government doesn’t need to launch it immediatel­y.

The anticipate­d annual cost of a full-fledged program is roughly $38.9 billion, which would be offset by economywid­e savings, the Parliament­ary Budget Officer estimated in a report released in October.

The NDP have suggested the plan could be phased in incrementa­lly if it only covers certain essential drugs first.

Davies said he expects to sit down with Health Minister Mark Holland this week, adding they’re in almost daily communicat­ion.

The Liberals know very well what they committed to and will meet their obligation­s under the agreement, Liberal House leader Steven MacKinnon said Tuesday.

Pulling support from the Liberals if they don’t meet the March 1 deadline is “not well thought out strategy,” Liberal MP Hedy

Fry chimed in on social media Tuesday.

If that triggers an election and the Conservati­ves win, there will be no pharmacare for the next four years for sure, she said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO ?? NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh holds a press conference Tuesday on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Singh is publicly contemplat­ing what it would mean for his party if the supply-and-confidence deal that ties his party to the minority Liberal government should end prematurel­y amid an ongoing stalemate over pharmacare.
CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh holds a press conference Tuesday on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Singh is publicly contemplat­ing what it would mean for his party if the supply-and-confidence deal that ties his party to the minority Liberal government should end prematurel­y amid an ongoing stalemate over pharmacare.

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