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Singh does not repeat the threat to tear up the agreement between NDP and Liberals

Justin Tang The Canadian Press The leader of the NDP , Jagmeet Singh, speaks to reporters before question period in the House of Commons on Wednesday.

New Democratic leader Jagmeet Singh did not want to reiterate on Wednesday the threat brandished by a member of his caucus and the delegates of his party that the agreement with the Liberals could be torn up.

“We will continue to use our pressure because we want to have a program that helps everyone, not the big pharmaceutical companies,” he responded to journalists who pressed him with questions on the subject.

< p>Despite multiple variations of the same question posed by various members of the press, Mr. Singh would not say, word for word, that he was prepared to withdraw from the support and confidence agreement with the Liberals if the bill that the government will table on drug insurance is deemed unsatisfactory.

More precisely, the New Democratic Party (NDP) is campaigning for the establishment of a public and universal program.

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During the convention of New Democratic activists last weekend, the delegates unanimously adopted a resolution discussing a possible withdrawal of the New Democrats from the agreement linking them to the Liberals.

According to the adopted text, the delegates argue that the breakdown of the agreement should occur in the scenario where the bill that the Liberals promised to table by the end of the year on prescription drug insurance does not “clearly commit to a program […] universal, complete and entirely public.”

The wording of the resolution specifies that it is not binding on the NDP caucus, but the MP and party health critic, Don Davies, affirmed that the elected representatives of the political party were “unanimously” in favor of such a withdrawal, if they consider the Liberal bill unsatisfactory.

Questioned about this “red line” on which Mr. Davies insisted, Mr. Singh seemed to go less far .

“Liberals know our position is clear. We want to have drug insurance that is universal and entirely public, something that will reduce drug costs for everyone, not a plan that will help big pharmaceutical companies,” the NDP leader repeated.

Former NDP strategist Karl Bélanger maintained in an interview that “Don Davies is not the leader, so he allows himself to go further.”

“It is not abnormal in a situation like this that there are people who send more aggressive signals than the one who is in charge of discussing directly with the Prime Minister and who must keep a way out, […] ] a margin for negotiation”, analyzed the man who is today president of the firm Traxxion Stratégies.

Mr. Bélanger recalled that the agreement with the Liberals provides for the adoption, by the end of the year, of a law on prescription drug insurance.

“It’s in two months. Are we going to elections in January? I'm not sure that's the NDP's objective at this time,” believes the ex-strategist, who worked with former NDP leaders Jack Layton and Thomas Mulcair.

The support and confidence agreement is designed to ensure that Justin Trudeau's Liberals, in a minority government situation, can remain in power until 2025.

In exchange, the Liberals promise to accomplish a series of projects, such as the launch of a drug insurance program.

If the agreement is torn up, an electoral campaign would not automatically be launched.

For this to happen, two avenues are possible. The House could withdraw its confidence in the government by a vote. In the other scenario, the Liberals could decide to call an election if the tide became favorable to them in voting intentions.

What room for fiscal maneuver?

Regardless, Employment Minister Randy Boissonnault suggested that Justin Trudeau's government does not take the NDP threat lightly.

“We always take the NDP to their word,” he said as he went to a meeting of the Liberal caucus.

He was then responding to a journalist's question asking him whether the government is taking the comments from New Democrats on drug insurance.

Mr Davies has regular meetings with Health Minister Mark Holland. “It's clear in our conversations that the cost of the program, it's important to make sure that the cost is not a big expense because it's not a fiscal situation, currently, today, where […] the affordability for that [is] there,” the minister said on Wednesday, in French.

The latter, however, did not close the door to finding a public and universal program, as the NDP wants it.

“We are in the middle of negotiations. The agreement we have with the NDP is working for the moment and when I talk to people in Edmonton and Alberta, the stability we have with this agreement, it works for them, it works for us, so we will continue to have negotiations,” added Mr. Boissonnault.

The House leader of the government, Karina Gould, did not want to comment on the concessions that the Liberals could make in their negotiations with the NDP.

“My job is really to work with the NDP in the House to advance the priorities that we have together,” she simply emphasized.

Teilor Stone

By Teilor Stone

Teilor Stone has been a reporter on the news desk since 2013. Before that she wrote about young adolescence and family dynamics for Styles and was the legal affairs correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining Thesaxon , Teilor Stone worked as a staff writer at the Village Voice and a freelancer for Newsday, The Wall Street Journal, GQ and Mirabella. To get in touch, contact me through my teilor@nizhtimes.com 1-800-268-7116