Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

NDP attempts to prod Liberals into action on pharmacare by tabling its own bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2023 10:27 AM
  • NDP attempts to prod Liberals into action on pharmacare by tabling its own bill

No longer content to wait for the Liberals to make good on their promise, the New Democrats tabled their own pharmacare legislation in the House of Commons Tuesday.

The NDP and Liberals struck a confidence-and-supply agreement last year that would see the NDP support the government on key votes to hold an election off until 2025 in exchange for progress on NDP priorities.

One of the conditions of that deal was that the Liberals make progress toward a universal pharmacare program by passing legislation before the end of this year. 

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh and his health critic Don Davies have since questioned the government's commitment to pharmacare.

"We found that with this government, even if we got things in writing, it's not a guarantee," Singh said at a press conference Tuesday. 

"We've got to continually fight, put pressure, push them to deliver." 

Davies pointed to recent developments at Canada's patented drug price regulator that saw major drug price reforms put on indefinite hold.

"The health minister suspended measures that would lower the cost for Canadians because the pharmaceutical industry demanded it," Davies charged.

Late last year, Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos wrote to the chair of the regulator to ask that the consultation period on the changes be paused to give drug companies, patient groups, provincial ministers and himself more time to understand the changes.

The letter caused a rift on the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board that ended with the resignation of several board members. Duclos has repeatedly denied putting undue pressure on the independent regulator. 

"We're deeply concerned and I think that there's not enough attention paid to this issue. This is shocking," Singh said.

The government is still doing consultation on its own pharmacare bill, Duclos confirmed Tuesday, and plans to table it by the end of the year.

"Lots of work yet to be done to be able to table that bill by the end of the year," Duclos said on his way into a cabinet meeting Tuesday. 

While the agreement between the Liberals and the NDP specifically called for the bill to be passed by the end of the year, Duclos said he can't guarantee that will happen.

"This is a minority government. We don't obviously control the House of Commons, but we'll do all we can to be able to both table and to pass the bill by the end of this year," he said. 

The Liberal-NDP deal was not specific about the content that should be included in the bill. 

The NDP version of the bill stipulates that a federal pharmacare program must be universal, single-payer and public, and Singh said the NDP expected the government to follow those principals when they negotiated the deal.

"They knew very well what we meant, and so they're on notice," he said. "We've provided a path forward for them and we now are going to wait and see what the government does."

MORE National ARTICLES

SFU Surrey getting a new medical school to train doctors

SFU Surrey getting a new medical school to train doctors
Ten days after being sworn in as Premier of British Columbia, David Eby was at SFU’s Surrey campus to announce $4.9 million in start-up funding for the medical school on Monday and to share some of the first details about the school, which is aiming to accept it first students by September 2026.  

SFU Surrey getting a new medical school to train doctors

Man allegedly assaulted several strangers before brandishing a weapon: VPD

Man allegedly assaulted several strangers before brandishing a weapon: VPD
Witnesses told police the man slapped a woman, assaulted a cyclist, then tried to attack someone who was walking amongst a group of people outside Nester’s Market. He also allegedly tried to start a fight near the Metropole Pub and brandished a weapon before being confronted by police.

Man allegedly assaulted several strangers before brandishing a weapon: VPD

Trudeau: Chinese protesters deserve free speech

Trudeau: Chinese protesters deserve free speech
Crowds in China angered by the anti-virus controls have called on leader Xi Jinping to resign in the biggest show of public dissent in decades. The regime has eased some of its strict controls after demonstrations in at least eight mainland cities as well as Hong Kong.  

Trudeau: Chinese protesters deserve free speech

Amanda Todd's harasser returned to the Netherlands

Amanda Todd's harasser returned to the Netherlands
Canada's Justice Department says Aydin Coban was taken back to his home country on Nov. 24, where he will continue serving a nearly 11-year sentence imposed by a Dutch court in 2017 for similar crimes involving more than 30 youth.

Amanda Todd's harasser returned to the Netherlands

BoC posts first quarterly loss in its history

BoC posts first quarterly loss in its history
The Bank of Canada's aggressive interest rate hikes this year have raised the cost of interest charges it pays on settlement balances deposited in the accounts of big banks. That's while the income the central bank receives from government bonds it holds remains fixed.  

BoC posts first quarterly loss in its history

Use of plastic straws, grocery bags already down

Use of plastic straws, grocery bags already down
The Canadian government is looking to curb domestic plastic pollution by the end of the decade as negotiations toward a formal plastics management treaty begin this week in Uruguay. Canada is one of nearly three dozen countries lobbying heavily for an international agreement that would end global plastic pollution by 2040.

Use of plastic straws, grocery bags already down