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Canada鈥檚 MPs return with cost of food, housing taking centre stage

House of Commons resumes sessions today with debate focused on the cost of living
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Parliament buildings in Ottawa. (Black Press file photo)

The federal Liberals intend to introduce legislation soon that would eliminate the GST from new rental housing construction and backdate the change to mid-September regardless of when it becomes law, Housing Minister Sean Fraser said Monday.

The bill would also reflect Prime Minister Justin Trudeau鈥檚 promise to extend the deadline by one year for small businesses to repay COVID-19 emergency loans, and update federal competition law to better prevent mergers that would result in higher prices for Canadian consumers.

Parliamentarians were back in Ottawa Monday as the House of Commons resumed sitting following a summer break.

Members of the government have come out swinging against Pierre Poilievre and his Conservatives, who are eating the Liberals鈥 lunch in the polls.

鈥淲e will not let self-serving partisan obstruction stand in the way of getting results for Canadians,鈥 House Leader Karina Gould said outside the House of Commons Monday morning.

She challenged Poilievre and his party to work with the government to solve the housing shortage and grocery price hikes, rather than simply 鈥渉aving a temper tantrum over in the corner.鈥

The Conservatives, too, intend to introduce legislation on housing this week that would eliminate the GST on some rental construction. It would also withhold federal funding from cities that don鈥檛 build more homes, and hold back infrastructure and transit funding when cities allow 鈥淣IMBYism鈥 to block new developments.

NIMBY stands for 鈥渘ot in my backyard,鈥 a term applied when local residents or businesses oppose new types of development in their neighbourhoods.

Poilievre said Conservatives will create a system for Canadians to lodge formal complaints with Ottawa about NIMBYism. He said one of his party鈥檚 main goals is to 鈥渞everse the housing hell that Justin Trudeau has caused for Canadians paying mortgages, buying homes or renting apartments.鈥

鈥淎fter eight years of Justin Trudeau, everything costs more,鈥 Poilievre said Sunday during a news conference on Parliament Hill.

鈥淲ork doesn鈥檛 pay, housing costs have doubled, rent has doubled, the needed mortgage payment and down payment for a home have doubled.鈥

Liberal programs, said Poilievre, require too much paperwork and take too long to roll out. He made fun of the name of the Liberals 鈥渉ousing accelerator fund,鈥 which took more than a year to get off the ground.

Fraser said he spent time over the weekend reading the Conservative plan and acknowledged there are some areas of agreement, including making the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. ensure that applications for its housing programs are decided upon within 60 days.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 something I had been thinking on, and credit where credit is due,鈥 Fraser said, giving a nod to Conservative MP Scott Aitchison for the idea.

鈥淭here鈥檚 things we agree on, like that, that I think we can make progress by working together.鈥

But then he trashed the rest of the Tories鈥 plan.

鈥淲hat I see with the Conservative plan is a handful of ideas that look frankly like they鈥檝e been pulled off Google after a five-minute piece of research (and) thrown at the wall to see what sticks, rather than concrete solutions to very real problems with Canadian housing.鈥

He called the NIMBYism reporting system a neighbourhood snitch line that won鈥檛 do anything to get new homes built, and said the Conservative GST promise would be limited only to low-cost rentals, while the Liberals are removing the tax from all new rental construction.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e explicitly leaving out most homes that will be put up for middle-class Canadians,鈥 said Fraser.

That alone would add a new layer of bureaucracy, he added, just to decide which new rentals would qualify for the GST exemption and which wouldn鈥檛.

The Liberals also intend to introduce legislation this fall to create a national pharmacare program, which is a requirement of their agreement with the NDP.

The two parties reached the deal in 2022, with the NDP agreeing to support the Liberals on key votes in the minority Parliament in exchange for the government implementing some New Democrat priorities.

First up on the House agenda Monday was debate on a bail reform bill that seeks to make it harder for some violent offenders to get bail. Premiers have been pushing for the reforms for months.

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