No talks with Bloc about bringing government down: NDP House leader
CTV
NDP House Leader Peter Julian says the Bloc Quebecois has not initiated conversations with his party to potentially bring down the minority Trudeau government, as Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet has threatened.
NDP House Leader Peter Julian says the Bloc Québécois has not initiated conversations with his party to potentially bring down the minority Trudeau government, as Leader Yves-François Blanchet has threatened.
"As House leaders, we're reaching out to all the parties every day, but I think there's a difference between what they might be saying publicly and what they're actually doing privately," Julian told CTV's Question Period host Vassy Kapelos, in an interview airing Sunday, when asked whether the Bloc has already started those talks.
Following the vote on a non-binding Bloc motion this week, Blanchet said he would start those discussions with the other opposition parties "as rapidly as next week" if the Liberals don't capitulate to his ultimatum. The motion passed, but most Liberal MPs voted against it.
Blanchet's line in the sand is seeing both Bills C-319 and C-282 — intended to boost Old Age Security (OAS) and protect supply management in future trade talks, respectively — become law by Oct. 29, or his party will start negotiating with the Conservatives and NDP to topple the government.
But so far, Julian said, they haven't been approached by the Bloc.
It's been a month since the NDP ended its longstanding supply-and-confidence agreement with the Liberals, destabilizing the dynamics in the House of Commons. While the Bloc seized on the opportunity to issue an ultimatum deadline that Blanchet says is immovable, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has maintained his party will make voting choices on a case-by-case basis.
When asked whether there are any specific policies or promises on which the NDP wants to see the Liberals acquiesce in order to maintain support on matters of confidence, Julian said his party was already able to "force" the government during the COVID-19 pandemic, before the supply-and-confidence agreement was even signed. He cited pandemic-era supports for small business, seniors and people with disabilities, as examples.