Liberal House leader Steven MacKinnon says the government does not have enough votes at the moment to pass the upcoming federal budget â and heâs pressing opposition parties to consider whether they want another election.
âAs we speak right now, we donât have the votes,â MacKinnon said in an interview on Rosemary Barton Live airing Sunday morning. He acknowledged Canada has a minority government but argued the Liberals have a mandate to move âthis country forward economically.â
The Liberal government will need the co-operation of at least one other party in order to pass the budget, which is being tabled on Nov. 4. Because the budget is a confidence vote, Canadians could be facing another election if it doesnât pass.
âThe opposition parties will have to determine whether the differences between us are sufficiently large to cause the Canadians to go to the polls,â MacKinnon told host Rosemary Barton. âWe would be reluctant to go to the polls.â
As the Liberals work to shore up support, opposition parties have been laying out their demands publicly and in private meetings with Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Transforming Canadian economy will take ‘some sacrifices’ and ‘some time,’ Carney says
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is demanding an âaffordable budgetâ from the Liberals that includes broad tax cuts and keeps the deficit under $42 billion. He also wants Canada to ditch its industrial carbon tax.
MacKinnon said Poilievre has put forward demands âhe already knows are unattainableâ and the Conservative leader wants to subtract âhundreds of billions of dollars of revenue from the federal government, so thatâs pretty hard to square.â
Meanwhile, Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet is demanding an increase to the federal health transfer to the provinces, new infrastructure investment, an expansion of the rapid housing initiative and boosting Old Age Security payments for those ages 65 to 75.
At the beginning of October â before meeting with Carney â Blanchet blasted the Liberals, saying there were no consultations and âno legitimacy to this budget.â
MacKinnon criticized those comments from Blanchet and said, âcoming from someone with 22 seats in a 343-seat House of Commons, thatâs a little rich.â
However, the Liberal House leader sounded more friendly to NDP Leader Don Davies. He told Barton he would not lump Davies in with the other opposition leaders because the NDP have been more constructive in their feedback.
âHe didnât make any commitments,’ says Poilievre after meeting with Carney on budget
âI have no idea what the NDP intends to do with respect to its votes on the budget. Thatâll obviously be up to their caucus and to their party. But again, the math is pretty clear. We donât have a majority,â MacKinnon said.
When pressed by Barton whether it’s the Liberalsâ job to find that support, MacKinnon said conversations continue to happen with opposition parties and âweâre getting their input.â
âBut we believe we have a mandate, and at the end of the day, some hard choices are going to have to be made.â
Over the week, Carney has been laying the groundwork for the budget, which is expected to be costly as the Liberal government tries to strengthen Canadaâs economy in the face of punishing U.S. tariffs.
After meeting with opposition party leaders, Carney told a group of university students Wednesday night that Canadians should be ready for some âchallengesâ and âsacrifices,â but âif we donât act now, the pressures will only grow.â
Davies says no discussions had with Liberals on exchanges for budget support
âI will always be straight about the challenges that we have to face and the choices we must make. And to be clear, we wonât transform our economy easily or in a few months â it will take some sacrifices and it will take some time.”
MacKinnon acknowledged that Canada will need to make hard choices âon the government operation sideâ and it wonât be able to do everything it would like so it can do more âon the investment side.â
âWe must make our supply chains better so that we can diversify markets away from the United States and send our products and our expertise both east and west,â MacKinnon said.
âSo weâll be investing massively on that side, but we will be making hard choices on the spending side and thatâs the kind of budget that this prime minister I think has described since heâs been sworn in.â










