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Conservative case for taking down Liberals not resonating with other parties

Poilievre wants to 鈥榬estore promise of Canada鈥, NDP, Bloc 鈥榥ot so eager鈥 to see him take power
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The House of Commons is expected to debate a Conservative non-confidence motion today that is the Conservatives鈥 first attempt of the fall to take down the Liberal government. Chairs and desks sit empty in the Chamber of the House of Commons, in Ottawa, Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre urged MPs to defeat the Liberal government on Tuesday, but opposition parties are turning the debate on his non-confidence motion into a referendum on the Conservative party鈥檚 policies instead.

Poilievre introduced a non-confidence motion in the opening minutes of the House of Commons sitting Tuesday, delivering a campaign-style speech laying out his vision for Canada under a Conservative government.

He said his plan is 鈥渢o bring home the promise of Canada, of a powerful paycheque that earns affordable food, gas and homes and safe neighbourhoods where anyone from anywhere can do anything. The biggest and most open land of opportunity the world has ever seen: that is our vision.鈥

Polls have favoured the Conservatives for more than a year now, and if they were to hold true in the next election it could result in a Conservative majority government.

Poilievre told the House if that happens he would lower taxes and eliminate the price on carbon, instead fighting climate change by approving large-scale green projects and using the revenues to reduce government debt.

鈥淲e will cap government spending with a dollar-for-dollar law that requires we find $1 of savings for every new dollar of spending,鈥 Poilievre said.

鈥淲e will cut bureaucracy, waste and consulting contracts.鈥

Poilievre and his party have not been specific about where exactly those cuts will come from, but they are the very reason the NDP鈥檚 Jagmeet Singh said his party wouldn鈥檛 vote to bring down the government.

鈥淲e are going to fight today against Conservative cuts and against the Conservative motion,鈥 Singh told the House.

Debate on the motion will conclude Tuesday with the vote scheduled to take place Wednesday afternoon.

Both the NDP and the Bloc Qu茅b茅cois indicated last week they would not support the non-confidence motion because they don鈥檛 support the Conservatives. If they vote no, the motion will be defeated and the Liberal government will survive its first test since its supply-and-confidence deal with the NDP ended earlier this month.

If the motion were to pass, the government would be defeated and Canadians very likely would see an immediate election.

The Bloc Qu茅b茅cois said they鈥檇 rather use the opportunity to negotiate with the Liberals, rather than trigger an election that would likely install Poilievre as prime minister.

鈥淲e listen to the Conservatives and are not sure that we鈥檙e so eager to see them take power,鈥 the Bloc鈥檚 House leader Alain Therrien told the House in French on Tuesday.

He said Poilievre has no plan to address the challenges of Quebec鈥檚 distinct society.

鈥淭here are situations in Quebec that are quite different from the rest of Canada,鈥 he said.

The Bloc has asked the Liberals to green-light the funding for their private member鈥檚 bill to raise pension payments for seniors under the age of 75.

The government hasn鈥檛 committed to doing that. The parliamentary budget officer has estimated the proposed change would cost about $16 billion over five years.

The prime minister was not in the House for the debate, and is instead representing Canada at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

He was asked about the non-confidence motion after U.S. President Joe Biden used his speech at the UN to reflect on his decision to withdraw from his party鈥檚 ticket in the upcoming election, saying that he chose to think about the people he serves rather than his own power.

鈥淭he Conservatives are very much thinking about power right now,鈥 Trudeau said in response.

鈥淚鈥檓 thinking about how we can best help Canadians. I鈥檓 thinking about how to put the best balance sheet in the G7 in service of Canadians, to invest in Canadians. Confident countries invest in their citizens. Right now, Pierre Poilievre is offering cuts.鈥

The Conservatives have another chance to introduce a non-confidence motion on Thursday during a second opposition day in the House of Commons. There are a total of seven opposition days required this fall, of which five will go to the Conservatives.





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