![]() |
| Canada’s Finance Minister Federal Budget ignores the poor and disenfranchised Special to The Canadian The Stephen Harper government’s budget will do little to help low income Canadians. Harper’s government has made some attempt to placate the opposition, but his efforts will only help a shrinking fraction of the population. The spending strategy is described as Timely, Temporary, and Targeted. Indeed it is. It’s too little, too late, for too few. While 75 billion dollars are given to the financial sector, there are only scraps left for the poorest in our society. In line with the ongoing Harper agenda, the budget emphasizes tax cuts, instead of making real investments in housing, infrastructure and people. He crows about investing in social housing and unemployment insurance. The budget says that it will invest 2 billion into social housing. Sounds great. But the cost of repairs to Ontario's housing are estimated at about $1.2 billion. And 60,000 people are on the waiting list for social housing in Toronto alone. Given that much of the infrastructural funding is dependent on cost-sharing with the cash-poor provinces and municipalities, the figures are misleading. Harper claims that he’s making things easier for laid off workers by adding 5 weeks to employment insurance. Given that 60% of Canadians aren’t eligible, this will do little for the majority of those suffering in the economic downturn.
As factories close and businesses go bankrupt, more and more Canadians will need help. Unfortunately the tax cuts, benefits and incentives will do little for them when they’re evicted, unable to obtain employment insurance, or scraping by on welfare and food banks. A budget that would really address the needs of the increasing ranks of poor Canadians would raise the welfare rates, expand employment insurance in a serious way, build new and quality social housing invest in transit, education and health care. This budget doesn’t even try. An economic recession that leads to layoffs, evictions and poverty is not the time for bailing out the corporations and playing political games. It’s the time to organize in our communities to support one another, and to fight to ensure that the poorest, the most vulnerable, are not abandoned yet again. Editorial reference, LINK Go to The Canadian TV, linked to Janine's Pledge Video SOCIALIZE: Stop the North American Union (NAU) agenda. Become a Member.
Become a Member: Would you like to see other similar articles and critical commentaries in The Canadian National Newspaper? Then, show your support. Make a member-pledge donation, in support of the Membership Drive of the Pro-Democracy Media Foundation. The Canadian can only continue to publish investigative articles in such areas, with the donations from members of the public in Canada, the U.S., and abroad. Consider making a donation of $50.00, $75.00, $100.00, $200.00 or more. Donors are eligible to receive our first collector's print edition in mail. Alternatively, you can send us a note to be placed on our special email list of members. Member-donors can also suggest articles or commentaries to be published in The Canadian. The Canadian is a socially progressive and not-for-profit national newspaper, with an international readership. We provide an alternative to the for-profit commercial focused media, which often censors vital information and perspective of potential interest to the diverse Canadian public, and other peoples internationally. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Copyright © 2009 The Canadian. All rights reserved. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||