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New health minister says pharmacare legislation is coming this fall

New health minister says pharmacare legislation is coming this fall

CBC
Thursday, August 17, 2023 12:41:54 AM UTC

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's new health minister says legislation to implement a universal pharmacare program will be tabled this fall.

Passing legislation to establish a national universal pharmacare program by the end of the year is a condition of the House of Commons supply-and-confidence agreement between the Liberals and the NDP.

To meet that deadline, the government's legislation will need to pass through the House of Commons and the Senate and undergo two committee studies before Parliament breaks in December.

Health Minister Mark Holland, who took on the portfolio in last month's cabinet shuffle, told reporters that conversations are ongoing but he plans to table a bill when the House of Commons returns.

"For my part, [conversations] are more nascent … just because of how recent I am to the role. But it certainly is our intention to proceed with legislation this fall," Holland said Wednesday.

When asked by CBC News, a spokesperson for Holland's office said there isn't a more specific timeline for tabling the legislation.

Holland's predecessor, Jean-Yves Duclos, had warned that pharmacare legislation might not pass by the end of the year.

"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," Duclos told reporters in June.

The NDP put forward a pharmacare bill in June in an effort to pressure the government to uphold that portion of the confidence-and-supply agreement.

When asked about the approaching deadline, an NDP spokesperson said the party still expects to see legislation passed by the end of the year.

"The goal is to pass every legislative stage before the end of the year. That's the aim here," the spokesperson said.

Holland's office said the government plans to introduce its own legislation rather than usher the NDP bill through the House.

NDP health critic Don Davies told CBC News his party's bill was meant to lay out New Democrats' expectations for the pharmacare program.

"It is crucial that the legislation be clear that the system is universal, comprehensive and entirely public, so no one will have to pay out of pocket for their medication," Davies said in a media statement.

Read full story on CBC
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