For his daily presser, prime minister Justin Trudeau led off with the fact that the Canadian Forces’ report on the conditions in Quebec long-term care facilities would be released later in the day (and it was), before moving onto the news that some 45,000 postings were up on the federal Job Bank for students, along with a renewed plea for employers to access the wage subsidy. During the Q&A, there were constant questions about what the federal government was going to do about long-term care, to which Trudeau kept reiterating that it was provincial jurisdiction but that the federal government was going to be at the table for the discussion on long-term solutions, which generally means the provinces will want federal dollars to pay for it. When asked about the upcoming G7 meeting and Donald Trump’s insistence it be held in-person, Trudeau said that in-person meetings are preferable to virtual ones, but it remained to be seen if this meeting would meet safety concerns – which is also a bit ironic considering that he insisted on carrying on fairly useless “virtual” committee meetings and pretending it’s parliamentary work, even though Parliament as a whole works best in-person.
As for the long-term care discussion, Jagmeet Singh started off the day by railing that Trudeau was using jurisdiction as an excuse for “not showing leadership,” which is either grossly ignorant for a someone with a law degree, or it’s a deeply cynical political tactic to mislead the public into believing that Trudeau is simply choosing not to act when in fact his hands are tied. Singh also went off on his spiel about how the federal government should shut down privatized long-term care delivery, which again ignores jurisdictional issues, and more to the point, conveniently ignores that many of these same problems are also found in the publicly run facilities, which belies that it’s a broader cultural problem than simply just cutting care for the sake of profit margins. And as for his reasons for going along with the government’s plans to keep the Commons in a neutered capacity, well, it seems he also doesn’t have any grasp about what his own job as an MP is.
ARGH! THE WORK OF PARLIAMENT IS NOT JUST ASKING QUESTIONS!
I’d venture a good 85% of the actual work of Parliament is supposed to be the Estimates process, which has been steamrolled under this government motion. https://t.co/7p3UTxX2yK— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) May 27, 2020
But they didn’t “get stuff done for workers.” Singh didn’t secure sick leave – it was an ongoing conversation that remains with the provinces because it’s their jurisdiction.
Meanwhile, MPs have abandoned any scrutiny of $150 billion in spending in the Estimates. That matters. https://t.co/rQbyvPOoqW— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) May 28, 2020
And in case you missed the point, an MP’s job is to scrutinize the Estimates. That’s one of the biggest and most important ways to hold the government to account – not asking performative questions for the cameras to distribute over social media.
— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) May 28, 2020
Speaking of those neutered committee hearings, the first “hybrid” special meeting was held yesterday, where big video screens were installed in the Commons chamber so that MPs could participate there by Zoom while a handful of MPs were still in the Chamber. The problem with this is that it adds a gloss of “legitimacy” to the farcical nature of these committee meetings, and Trudeau will disingenuously talk about how they’re carrying on the “important work of Parliament” by letting MPs ask all these questions, while committing the lie of omission that the crucial work of studying the Estimates isn’t getting done. Oops. But everyone is instead wrapped up in the novelty of it all and the pretense that there is parliamentary business being done – which there really isn’t – and the Liberals have apparently judged correctly that only the appearance of accountability matters.
Some committee members will participate in person at #COVI committee meetings, while others will do so virtually. For more information: link to fact sheet https://t.co/maUWSl07MM (2/2) pic.twitter.com/LKoqvZCBBS
— House of Commons (@OurCommons) May 27, 2020