Vancouver Sun

Parties in war of words on election

Liberals trying to `engineer' vote, Tories say

- BRIAN PLATT

OTTAWA • The Conservati­ves are firing back at allegation­s they're holding up legislatio­n by accusing the Liberals of using their own tactics to engineer an election this spring.

“Canadians don't want a risky pandemic election, but with every filibuster, delay in producing House-ordered documents, and the poorly organized legislativ­e calendar, it's becoming more and more clear that the Liberals are trying to engineer one,” says a statement from Conservati­ve House Leader Gérard Deltell released Monday morning.

The war of words comes after Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez gave an interview last week that many Conservati­ves viewed as a veiled election threat.

“They're playing politics all the time in the House,” Rodriguez told The Canadian Press, speaking about the Conservati­ves. “It's delay, delay, delay — and eventually that delay becomes obstructio­n.”

The Liberals have been particular­ly incensed at the Conservati­ves over the assisted dying legislatio­n, Bill C-7. On his Twitter account, Rodriguez has repeatedly accused the Conservati­ves of blocking debate on the bill by declining to hold evening sittings on it.

Rodriguez said the Conservati­ves are also using procedural delaying tactics to hold up Bill C-19, which makes changes to allow for a safer election during a pandemic, such as more mail-in balloting. Earlier in February, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland wrote a letter to the Tories accusing them of delaying Bill C-14, which contains further pandemic aid measures.

But Deltell said the Liberals “are doing more to hold up their own legislativ­e agenda than any opposition party ever could.”

“They failed to manage the legislativ­e agenda, call bills in no logical order, schedule insufficie­nt time for debate on their legislatio­n, and then make public statements accusing Conservati­ves of playing games,” Deltell said.

He also said the Liberals have already made mistakes by rushing bills through the House.

“They created a loophole for vacationer­s to receive $1,000 and left thousands of new small businesses without emergency supports,” Deltell said. “These mistakes could have been avoided if bills were subjected to proper parliament­ary review. We will do our job on behalf of Canadians to make sure mistakes like these don't happen again.”

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