Toronto Star

Will there be a fall election?

Bloc leader Yves-François Blanchet delivers an ultimatum to Trudeau’s government,

- ALEX BALLINGALL

The Bloc Québécois will try to topple the Liberal minority government and trigger a federal election this fall unless Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, his chief of staff and finance minister resign.

Bloc Leader Yves-François Blanchet laid down the ultimatum Wednesday on Parliament Hill, telling reporters that his party has lost faith in the current leadership of the federal government amidst huge spending during the COVID-19 pandemic and the WE Charity scandal.

He said the Bloc will table a no-confidence motion in the House of Commons at its earliest opportunit­y — which he said would come in October — unless Trudeau, Finance Minister Bill Morneau, and Trudeau’s chief of staff Katie Telford all step down.

The motion would need the support of the opposition Conservati­ves and New Democrats for a majority of MPs to declare the House has lost confidence in the government. According to convention, the Governor General would then call an election or give the opposition the chance to win the confidence of the House.

“Which is worse — keeping them and this government in place, or creating a temporary distortion in the management of the crisis?” Blanchet responded when asked about his willingnes­s to trigger a vote during the pandemic.

The Prime Minister’s Office declined to comment Wednesday on Blanchet’s ultimatum.

The Liberals have been rocked by controvers­y since late June, when the government announced it had outsourced the multimilli­on-dollar Canada Student Service Grant program to WE Charity, a Toronto-based organizati­on that has paid members of Trudeau’s family tens of thousands of dollars in fees and expenses. Morneau’s daughter also works for the organizati­on and the finance minister revealed in July that he had repaid the charity more than $41,000 for trips he took to Kenya and Ecuador in 2017. Trudeau and Morneau both participat­ed in the cabinet decision on May 22 to award the grant program to WE Charity, and later apologized for doing so. They are now being investigat­ed by the House of Commons ethics commission­er.

Trudeau has previously broken the Commons’ ethics law twice as prime minister.

Speaking Wednesday, Blanchet said the conflict of interest scandal is just one reason his party wants Trudeau, Morneau and Telford to resign. He also pointed to how the Canada

Mortgage Housing Corporatio­n outsourced administra­tion of the government’s COVID-19 rent assistance program to a private company for which Telford’s husband is executive vice-president.

Blanchet also criticized the Liberal Party of Canada for applying for and receiving public money through the government’s emergency wage subsidy (which the New Democratic and Conservati­ve parties are also receiving). He said the Bloc has not discussed triggering an election with the other opposition parties.

Even if the Bloc tables a confidence motion, it’s not clear it would succeed in the House. The Conservati­ves have called for Trudeau’s resignatio­n, too, but that party is in the final days of a leadership race. Conservati­ve spokespers­on Keslie Chiasson said Wednesday that the party’s current leader, Andrew Scheer, has already said it will be up to his successor to decide whether to declare non-confidence in the Liberal government. Meanwhile, the NDP said Wednesday that it will keep trying to work in the minority Parliament. In a written statement, the party said the government “needs to earn the confidence of Canadians” by working with New Democrats to improve Employment Insurance and make sure children are safe as schools and daycares reopen during the pandemic. “Those are the things we will be fighting for and be looking for as we continue to try to make Parliament work. Just like we have been throughout the minority Parliament,” the NDP said.

The Greens, who hold three of the 338 seats in the Commons, rejected the idea of an election during a pandemic. Posting on social media, interim leader JoAnn Roberts said “threatenin­g an election during a pandemic is irresponsi­ble” and called for changes to elections law to protect health and safety before the next federal vote.

“Threatenin­g an election during a pandemic is irresponsi­ble.”

JO-ANN ROBERTS GREEN PARTY INTERIM LEADER

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 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said he will try to trigger a vote unless Finance Minister Bill Morneau, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his chief of staff, Katie Telford, resign.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said he will try to trigger a vote unless Finance Minister Bill Morneau, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his chief of staff, Katie Telford, resign.

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