The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Liberals pledge massive investment­s if re-elected

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OTTAWA — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party on Wednesday pledged a whopping $78 billion in new investment­s over five years, with a focus on health care, if it wins the Sept. 20 federal election.

The investment­s would be partially offset by more than $25 billion in new revenue, mostly from a higher tax on profits of banks and insurers and fighting tax evasion, the party said in releasing its full election platform.

These investment­s are in addition to the $101 billion in extra spending over three years passed in a budget earlier this year and would be spread over five years, from 2021-22 to 2025-26.

The Liberals spent heavily on programs to shield citizens and businesses from the COVID-19 pandemic, driving the national debt and budget deficits to record highs. Trudeau sidesteppe­d repeated questions as to when the budget might be balanced.

“I think it matters to be fiscally responsibl­e. I think it matters to live within our means,” he told a news conference in Toronto. “I think it

also matters to be making the right investment­s so that future generation­s can prosper.”

“This is a plan for jobs and growth,” Finance Minister

Chrystia Freeland said, standing alongside Trudeau.

Debt as a percentage of gross domestic product is projected to decline two percentage points to 46.5 per cent in 2025-26, the Liberals said.

Trudeau called a snap vote two years early on Aug 15 hoping his management of the pandemic and his vaccine roll out would be a springboar­d to a majority. But the polls show

Trudeau’s Liberals in a statistica­l tie with Erin O’toole’s Conservati­ves less than three weeks before the vote.

The platform is “more borrowing, more debt, higher taxes, and rising prices,” said Dan Robertson, chief of strategy for O’toole, on Twitter.

O’toole has also put forward a big-spending platform, but he said on Tuesday he would balance the budget in 10 years’ time “without cuts” and only by boosting revenues through stronger economic growth. The Conservati­ves have yet to detail the costs of their platform.

“If he doesn’t show the numbers, why should Canadians believe him?” Trudeau said of O’toole’s pledge to balance the budget. “He’s relying on a level of magical

thinking that involves three per cent growth every single year.”

Most of the individual policies in the Liberal platform have been announced, but this is the first glimpse at a full pricing of the plan with investment­s focused on improving long-term care, mental health, Indigenous health and lowering soaring housing costs.

One new element in the platform is a promise by Liberals to increase accessibil­ity for abortions across the country while revoking the charity status of anti-abortion organizati­ons, an issue that has historical­ly divided Canadian Conservati­ves.

While legal in Canada, access to abortions varies by province. Trudeau has suggested that a woman’s right to choose could be threatened if the Conservati­ves win, given that some social conservati­ves want abortion limits to be imposed. O’toole reiterated on Wednesday that he is prochoice.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO • REUTERS ?? Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau looks on as he delivers a speech at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre during his election campaign tour in Toronto on Wednesday.
CARLOS OSORIO • REUTERS Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau looks on as he delivers a speech at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre during his election campaign tour in Toronto on Wednesday.

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