Montreal Gazette

NDP TARGETS ULTRA-RICH

Party adopts new tax strategy

- ANJA KARADEGLIJ­A

The NDP voted in favour of new wealth taxes on millionair­es and a $20 minimum wage during its weekend policy convention, at which leader Jagmeet Singh said his party's focus on making the ultrarich pay “their fair share” distinguis­hes the NDP from the Liberals.

The Liberals “chose to side with those at the very top, the ultra-wealthy,” he said in a speech. “It shouldn't be a surprise. This is who the Liberals really are.”

The NDP tax resolution includes a marginal tax rate of 80 per cent for individual­s whose personal incomes are over $1 million, as well as a one-per-cent tax on those with “fortunes over $20 million.” It also involves a tax on “pandemic and disaster excess profit,” which “at least” doubles the tax rate and would apply to “increased corporate profits in times of crisis.”

Speaking in favour of the resolution at the convention, Singh said it's aimed at making sure the “ultra-wealthy contribute their fair share, so we can reinvest into the things that we need,” such as better health care that includes mental health, dental, and pharmacare, as well as paid sick leave.

The tax motion also calls for closing tax loopholes and action to address tax cheats and tax havens, requiring web giants to pay their share, and eliminatin­g corporate tax credits if they're not accompanie­d by job protection and job creation guarantees.

The party isn't obligated to include the convention resolution­s in its election platform, but it did campaign on a one-per-cent tax on wealth over $20 million in the last election and introduced a motion calling for such a tax in the House of Commons last fall.

In his speech on Sunday, Singh said “those who profited off the pandemic, the ultra-wealthy,” and large corporatio­ns who make profits in the country but don't pay taxes in Canada should be the ones who pay the cost of the recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

When it comes to weathering the pandemic, Canadians aren't all in the same boat, he argued. “We're certainly in the same storm, but some of us are in leaky lifeboats, while others are in luxury yachts. In this storm, the Liberals continue to side with those in luxury yachts,” Singh said.

Only 13 resolution­s from a shortlist of 140, and an initial total of 500, made it to a vote over the weekend convention. On Saturday much of the time allotted to debating resolution­s, which multiple delegates said wasn't long enough in the first place, was taken up by points of order and complaints about technical, accessibil­ity and structural problems with the virtual convention.

Singh said at a press conference Sunday that the party wanted to prioritize debate, but said the disadvanta­ge of that was that fewer resolution­s come through. “It's something we'll keep working on. I recognize it's a challenge,” he said in French.

Among those that did pass was a resolution to end “all trade and economic cooperatio­n with illegal settlement­s in Israel-palestine,” and suspend “bilateral trade of all arms and related materials” with Israel.

Singh didn't answer when he was asked whether the resolution will make it into the party's platform. He said it's “based on a lot of evidence that we've heard from internatio­nal human rights groups that say that we need to apply pressure to achieve a solution” to the Israel-palestine conflict. “That's something I support. To achieve a peaceful resolution we need to, as an internatio­nal community, use our tools to achieve that,” he said.

In response to a question about whether the resolution opens up the party to accusation­s of anti-semitism, Singh said he wasn't concerned, and is committed to fighting anti-semitism. “I strongly believe in Israel's right to exist, and I have raised concerns about criticism that that could be characteri­zed as anti-semitism,” he said.

A proposal to oppose the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance definition of anti-semitism did not make it to the floor for voting.

Other resolution­s that passed over the weekend included motions to eliminate for-profit long-term care and making long-term care part of the universal health care system, to push the federal government to legislate paid sick days for all workers that fall under its jurisdicti­on, and a resolution in favour of solidarity with protesting farmers in India.

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