Ottawa Citizen

Martin mocks Harper, Mulcair on economy

Former PM almost overshadow­s Trudeau in campaign appearance

- MURRAY BREWSTER

Paul Martin returned to the Liberal campaign trail Friday to lend credibilit­y to Justin Trudeau’s economic team in Quebec, but for a few moments, people could be forgiven for wondering who was running for prime minister.

The contrast between the seasoned campaigner and the young, telegenic leader was never more apparent than at an event in Martin’s old Montreal riding, now renamed LaSalle-Emard-Verdun.

The former prime minister and finance minister, lionized by Liberals for taming the federal deficit in the 1990s, almost overshadow­ed Trudeau as he delivered a passionate, articulate denunciati­on of the Conservati­ve fiscal record.

Martin sharpened his direct appeal to left-leaning voters made earlier in the week by accusing the NDP of siding with the Harper government on economic policy.

The public has grown used to the Harper government’s mantra on deficits, but should be startled by what they hear from New Democrats, he said.

“That Tom Mulcair is now a student of Stephen Harper’s economy makes absolutely no sense,” said Martin. “Where is the conscience of those who belong in the NDP? How can the NDP party — those who’ve worked it for all these years — stand for the fact that the party is now holding hands with the Conservati­ves and saying that our goal in the next mandate is to do absolutely nothing?”

He mocked Harper’s animated response Thursday to the Liberal proposal to run “modest” shortfalls and said criticism of the plan was rich coming from a government that has added $150 billion to the national debt.

“He’s the king of deficits,” said Martin, whose remarks in English seemed aimed at an audience outside of Quebec.

“The current Conservati­ve government has ground the economy down so far, trapping our most vulnerable of citizens in the process, that the next government has to act — and that the NDP doesn’t understand that boggles the mind.

“Conservati­ve obsession with eliminatin­g the deficit down to the final decimal point is more than short-sighted. It’s yesterday’s war.”

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair, also in Montreal, said the Liberals shouldn’t be labelling anybody when it comes to finances.

“Justin, when you’re standing beside the king of austerity, Paul Martin — the man who cut 24 per cent of social and health transfers to the provinces, who cut deeply into employment insurance and put an end to all federal spending in social housing — could you be a little more discreet before you criticize the NDP’s balanced, realistic approach to taking care of future generation­s?”

The Conservati­ve campaign, in an attempt to rebut Liberal and NDP assertions that the country is in deficit now, pointed Friday to new Finance Department figures that say the federal treasury posted a $5-billion surplus for the first three months of the fiscal year.

Trudeau, whose pitch was delivered mostly in French, attempted to frame the ballot box question for Quebec voters “as a choice between jobs, investment and growth or cuts and cuts and cuts.”

Liberals emphasized the party’s recently announced infrastruc­ture platform, which proposes to invest as much as $125 billion to fix crumbling roads and bridges.

Trudeau put particular emphasis on public transit and investment­s in early learning and childhood developmen­t — issues that have been front and centre in the province.

 ??  ?? Justin Trudeau
Justin Trudeau

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada