The conservative leader Pierre Poilievre will go to his Caucus on Sunday to establish priorities for the next session of the Parliament. They will probably include addressing affordability, unemployment, crime and immigration: conservative issues argue that liberals are not addressing.
A week ago, Poilievre Posted in Social Networks A letter he wrote to Prime Minister Mark Carney that details the plans of the conservatives for the fall and promising that his party “will cause his government to take into account because our citizens deserve better.”
“Our goal is to reduce costs, block criminals, hit the brakes in immigration, obtain shovels and deliver payment checks in the pockets. We want a safe and affordable country as we have done before this liberal government,” the letter said.
During the summer, Pailievre has exacerbated his attacks against the government, which culminated with his accusation last week that Carney had a “Seinfeld summer” and did not deliver tangible results for the Canadians, referring to the successful television comedy of 1990 Seinfeldwhich has been described as “a show about nothing.”
My letter to Prime Minister Carney on the return of Parliament exposes the conservative list of pending tasks:
1. fix the liberal crisis of the cost of living
2. Arrange the liberal crisis of the loss of work
3. Arrange the liberal crime crisis
4. Arrange the liberal immigration crisis
Our goal: stronger for home … pic.twitter.com/gk0ood2bco
The conservatives have emphasized that they would pass their Canadian sovereignty lawThat it re -packs many of the campaign promises of the party, including the drainage of the oil ban on the west coast, kill the industrial emission limit and eliminate the industrial carbon tax.
In his letter to Carney, Pailievre said that the proposed legislation “would open our country for business … so we do more at home and depend less on others.”
On Thursday, Carney announced the Initial section Of the projects, the federal government says that it will help to take off quickly, including the expansion of the production of liquefied natural gas in the British columbia, improving the port of Montreal and the construction of a copper mine in Saskatchewan.
In an interview sitting with CBC Radio’s The house on FridayPoilievre walked the announcement and said that Carney has “has now been the prime minister for six months, difficult to believe, and has not delivered a permit for a single project of construction of the nation.”
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, talking to Catherine Cullen from CBC on Friday morning, says that building more liquefaction plants to process Canadian natural gas and increase international buyers, specifically in Asia, could help reduce global emissions.
Focus on immigration and crime
Pailievre called to Ottawa Earlier this summer, to amend the Criminal Code so that the use of force was reasonable against a person who enters illegally in a home and represents a threat to those inside.
In his letter, the conservative leader said that his party will hold the liberals for “a decade of reckless policies” who argued that “they left the Canadians less safe and the less dissuired criminals.”
At a press conference in Vaughan, Ontario, this week, Poilievre said that his party will present the “bail prison law” to respond to crime concerns. The sponsor of the bill, the deputy of the southwest of Ontario, Arpan Khanna, drew the 10th position in the private member of invoices, which means that it is likely that at some point in this fall it is probable. The invoices of most private members fail.
The legislation, if approved, will unwind parts of bill C-75 of the last liberal government, which introduced what is called a “restriction principle” that requires judges to release some people accused of a crime on bail in the “earlier reasonable opportunity” and with the “less burdensome conditions.”
The conservative leader has also said that his party Axtre the temporary program of foreign workers and create a separate and independent program for agricultural work difficult to fill. According to Pailievre, the program has filled the cheap labor market, excluding Canadian young people.
After a housing announcement on Tuesday morning, conservative leader Pierre Poilievre went to the Canadian consensus on immigration. He attributed the current shortage to government policies, not the influx of immigrants and temporary foreign workers.
Public surveys suggest that immigration, once a little controversial issue for Canadians, is now a prominent problem. A Nanos Research survey published this week found that almost three quarters of Canadian respondents now support the reduction of the number of new immigrants.
Abacus’s data, another voting firm, have also been tracking the collapsed support. What was once a relatively marginal political problem has increased the list of national priorities. Almost a third of the voters surveyed this month said immigration is one of its main three problems.
Carney said earlier this month that his government is reviewing the temporary program of foreign workers. The prime minister also said that when he speaks with the business leaders of all Canada, his main problem is the tariffs and his second is how to obtain more foreign workers.
“That program has a role, it must focus on your role,” said Carney. “It is part of what we will discuss: how well the temporary program of foreign workers is working and how our general immigration system works.”