Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jagmeet Singh: New Democrats Are Ready To Fight Growing Gap Between Canada's Rich And Poor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2018 11:46 AM
    OTTAWA — Federal NDP leader Jagmeet Singh kicked off two days of strategy sessions with members of his caucus on Wednesday with a message: New Democrats are ready to fight the growing gap between Canada's rich and poor.
     
     
    The question, which NDP MPs will wrestle with behind closed doors, is how the party can convince Canadians that it has a better solution to addressing income inequality than the Liberals, who have also emphasized the issue.
     
     
    The answer could well define how the NDP does in next year's election, which is already looming large for federal parties despite being more than 20 months away.
     
     
    Singh provided a snapshot of his thinking in an opening address to NDP MPs, who were originally slated to meet in Saguenay, Que., before a winter-storm warning forced the party to relocate the gathering to Ottawa.
     
     
    The new NDP leader, who took the party's reins in October, cited two studies, including one by respected civil society group Oxfam, that indicated the wealthiest individuals in Canada and around the world were getting richer.
     
     
    At the same time, he singled out the rising costs of childcare, housing, cellular phones, the Internet and prescription drugs as areas where average Canadians are feeling the pinch.
     
     
    "Meanwhile, big corporations move to punish workers who just want to make a living wage," Singh said in an apparent reference to the response by some companies to Ontario's recent minimum-wage increase.
     
     
    "And unfair trade deals are putting the interests of the few over the interests of the many. Canadians are being told the economy is doing great, but they're not feeling the benefits."
     
     
    The reference to trade deals coincided with the latest round of NAFTA talks in Montreal, and the surprise news Tuesday that Canada and 10 other countries in the Asia-Pacific region had struck a deal on a revised Trans-Pacific Partnership.
     
     
    Singh also sent a warning to Canada's "super-rich": Don't get too comfortable.
     
     
    "New Democrats aren't worried that making the life of the super-rich a little bit more difficult, we're not worried about doing that, because we know the rest of Canadians have been struggling for far too long," he said.
     
     
    "Our job is simple: we must listen to Canadians, and then work hard to find real solutions to the problems they are experiencing. This is the time to tackle imbalances and injustices in the economic system."
     
     
    Speaking to reporters after Singh's address, NDP trade critic Tracey Ramsey called on the Liberal government to release the text of the new TPP deal and explain its back-up plan if the NAFTA talks fail.
     
     
    Ramsey expressed concern about the TPP's potential impact on Canada's automotive and dairy sectors, but said that without actually seeing the text, it was impossible to say whether the NDP would support or oppose it.
     
     
    "What is TPP?" she said. "At this point, I can't say that without getting my eyes on the agreement."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate

    Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate
    VANCOUVER — Police appear to be cracking down on pop-up stalls selling marijuana while frustrations mount over the open-air market operating in a prominent square in downtown Vancouver.

    Vancouver Police Crack Down On Pop-Up Pot Vendors After Weeks-Long Stalemate

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard
    Firefighters were still on the scene of a large fire in Port Coquitlam, B.C., late Monday after a collision in a CP Rail yard.

    Large Fire Erupts When Truck Carrying Ethanol Hits Train At B.C. Rail Yard

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free
    The university is poised to become only the third post-secondary institution in B.C. to ban smoking on its premises, starting Jan. 21, 2018.

    Kwantlen Polytechnic University Goes Smoke-Free

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake
    VANCOUVER — A tsunami warning issued for coastal British Columbia was cancelled Tuesday morning after people living along parts of the province's coast evacuated to higher ground when a powerful earthquake struck off Alaska.

    Tsunami Fears Send People In B.C. To Higher Ground; Warning Ends After Quake

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis
    The fire department has partnered with Vancouver-based software developer GINQO to create a program that mines data from dispatch calls in real-time to identify clusters of overdoses.

    Firefighters In Surrey, B.C. Help Develop Software To Combat Overdose Crisis

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress
    TIGNISH, P.E.I. — The president of a P.E.I. branch of the Royal Canadian Legion is expected to apologize after a Sikh man was reportedly asked to remove his religious head covering and heckled with racist remarks.

    P.E.I. Legion To Apologize After Sikh Man Reportedly Asked To Remove Headdress