Home POLITICS Opposition parties grapple with new reality of Liberal majority government

Opposition parties grapple with new reality of Liberal majority government

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Poilievre says Carney needs to ‘get things done … without blaming others’.
The morning after the Liberals secured a thin majority government, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Prime Minister Mark Carney has no more excuses if he doesn’t deliver for Canadians.
“The Liberals wanted a majority — well, absolute power comes with absolute responsibility,” the leader of the Official Opposition told the House of Commons on Tuesday.
“They will actually have to get things done. They will have to do so without blaming others and they will have to start now.”
With the help of five floor-crossers and a few byelection wins, the Liberals cobbled together a majority less than a year after winning a minority government. Carney and his party argued that a majority would help them speed along the government’s agenda, even though the Liberals had been able to find success in pushing key pieces of legislation through Parliament with opposition support. The Liberals’ majority is slim, but still gives the party control over some key procedures in the House. They can outvote the rest of the opposition parties as long as their MPs vote in unison — that includes on legislation and motions that would limit the amount of time debating legislation.
Currently, the Liberals don’t have control of committees — which are constituted to reflect the parties’ seat standings in the House meaning the Conservatives and Bloc could outvote the Liberals while reviewing legislation. But committees can be reconstituted by issuing a motion in the House, which the Liberals now have the votes to pass.
While the Liberals still need the winners of Monday’s byelections to be sworn in before technically gaining full control of the House, opposition parties are already grappling with the new reality.
Poilievre signalled that he intends to keep up the pressure on the government and hold Carney to account.
“I will continue to lead that fight in this House, across the country and in the next election,” he said. Even though his party lost some leverage and a closely contested byelection in the Montreal suburb of Terrebonne, Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said he thinks they are well positioned for future electoral success.
“The Bloc Québécois did much better than we did last year [in Terrebonne],” he said during a news conference, arguing that the Liberals picked up votes from former NDP and Conservative supporters…
Source: cbc.ca/news/politics/

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