Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

NDP to tout its economic management skills, bash Tory record

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2015 02:37 PM
  • NDP to tout its economic management skills, bash Tory record

OTTAWA — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair is kicking off the new year with a concerted effort to persuade Canadians that New Democrats can be trusted to manage the fragile economy.

With an election looming within nine months, Mulcair and his MPs are gathering for two days, starting Thursday, to plot strategy.

The meeting comes as plunging oil prices and the resulting drops in tax revenues have economists warning about potential problems for both federal and provincial governments.

Insiders say the strategy sessions will focus on what the NDP sees as two myths fostered by Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives.

One: that the Conservatives are prudent fiscal managers dedicated to economic growth and job creation and on the road to a budget surplus in the coming fiscal year.

Two: that a reckless, big-spending NDP government would ruin the progress that's been made, raise taxes and plunge the country back into deficit.

A perceived lack of economic expertise has long been an Achilles heel for the NDP, which has never formed a federal government.

However, New Democrats like to boast that provincial NDP governments have typically been the most fiscally prudent.

Mulcair is scheduled to kick off the two-day caucus retreat with a speech that is expected to shed some light on his economic policy.

And on Friday the gathering will hear from Kevin Page, the former parliamentary budget officer, who is expected to offer a harsh critique of the Harper government's fiscal record.

Mulcair has been unveiling planks for the NDP election platform since the fall, including a national program to provide 1 million daycare spaces, at a cost of $5 billion a year once it's fully operational. He's also pledged to restore the annual six-per-cent increase in health-care transfers to the provinces, which could drain an additional $36 billion out of federal coffers.

He has been less precise about how he'd pay for his proposals, other than promising to roll back some of the corporate tax cuts implemented by the Harper government.

The collapse of oil prices has made it more difficult for any of the parties to firmly predict how much money they'll have to play with in crafting their election platforms. Some economists already doubt that Harper can keep his promise to balance the books in the coming fiscal year, predicting the loss of oil revenue will keep the federal government in the red for as much as another two years.

However, Finance Minister Joe Oliver has insisted the government is on track to a small surplus next year — most of which has already been earmarked for a series of family tax benefits.

The Conservatives have put opposition parties in a position where they'll likely have to scrap some of those tax cuts in order to afford their own proposed programs — thereby reinforcing the Tory argument that they're reckless tax-and-spenders.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has said he would kill the recently announced measure to allow couples with young children to split their income for tax purposes, a measure he says helps only the top 15 per cent of families.

Mulcair is also adamantly opposed to income-splitting, but has yet to specifically say he'd roll back the Tory measure.

MORE National ARTICLES

Family says inquest report into Winnipeg ER death a 'wasted opportunity'

Family says inquest report into Winnipeg ER death a 'wasted opportunity'
WINNIPEG — The family of a man who died during a 34-hour wait in an emergency room says an inquest into his death was "a wasted opportunity" to get at the root causes of racism against aboriginal people in Canada's health-care system.

Family says inquest report into Winnipeg ER death a 'wasted opportunity'

RCMP charge fine options court coordinator on Saskatchewan reserve with fraud

RCMP charge fine options court coordinator on Saskatchewan reserve with fraud
BIG RIVER, Sask. — RCMP have charged a woman with more than 100 counts of fraud and forgery for allegedly running a court scam out of a reserve in northern Saskatchewan.

RCMP charge fine options court coordinator on Saskatchewan reserve with fraud

Calgary mayor says gay-straight alliance bill 'damaging and hateful'

Calgary mayor says gay-straight alliance bill 'damaging and hateful'
Calgary's mayor says a now-delayed Alberta government bill about gay-straight alliances in schools would have focused international attention on "what kind of hillbillies we are."

Calgary mayor says gay-straight alliance bill 'damaging and hateful'

CMHC cutting 215 jobs in restructuring, adding to risk management and IT

CMHC cutting 215 jobs in restructuring, adding to risk management and IT
OTTAWA — The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. is cutting 215 jobs in a organization of the Crown corporation, which provides mortgage loan insurance and market statistics.

CMHC cutting 215 jobs in restructuring, adding to risk management and IT

Body Of A Missing BC Truck Driver Found In Mill's Wood-Chip Container After 2 Days

Body Of A Missing BC Truck Driver Found In Mill's Wood-Chip Container After 2 Days
The BC Coroners Service says workers at the Catalyst Paper Mill couldn't find 66-year-old Perry Thomas about a half hour after he arrived on Tuesday.

Body Of A Missing BC Truck Driver Found In Mill's Wood-Chip Container After 2 Days

Surrey Mother Charged With Murder In 8-year-old Daughter's Death, Father 'Devastated'

Surrey Mother Charged With Murder In 8-year-old Daughter's Death, Father 'Devastated'
"Life will never be the same after losing my daughter to murder. Our family courts and thus we all failed #Teagan," he wrote in abbreviated social-media style.

Surrey Mother Charged With Murder In 8-year-old Daughter's Death, Father 'Devastated'