Green Party leader calls on Trudeau to curb COVID-19 confusion and appoint a national task force
'What's happening right now doesn't work — that's clear,' Annamie Paul says
Green Party Leader Annamie Paul said today Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should immediately appoint a panel of expert scientists to help coordinate the national response to COVID-19 as the number of cases continues to rise.
Speaking to reporters on Parliament Hill today, Paul said Canadians are not being well served by the confusing current patchwork of federal, provincial and municipal COVID-19 policies.
She said the country must have clear, coordinated messages, with officials speaking with "one voice."
WATCH: Green Party Leader Annamie Paul calls for a national approach to the pandemic:
She cited the example of the recent byelection in Toronto-Centre, which Paul lost to Liberal Marci Ien. Paul pointed out that byelection voters were being told by federal Elections Canada officials that it was safe to vote even as municipal leaders were encouraging them to stay close to home.
Canada doesn't need a "one size fits all" approach, Paul said, but the country should have something like Australia's National COVID-19 Commission Advisory Board. That board, according to its terms of reference, is responsible for "mobilizing a whole‑of-society and whole-of-economy effort, to take action against the impacts of the global COVID-19 pandemic."
Paul said the country could be divided into colour-coded zones — as Ontario and Quebec already have done for some regions — with national standards determining what those living in those zones can and cannot do during the pandemic.
The national task force would take the lead on drafting restrictions to ensure some level of uniformity across the country, she said, with the understanding that some regions are performing better than others with respect to case counts.
"The problem right now is we have very mixed and confusing messages at a time when people have said they are willing to do what is necessary to prioritize life. We do not have coordinated, unified messaging on the pandemic," she said.
And while Canada is a federation, with a division of powers between various jurisdictions and levels of government, Paul said now is not the time for squabbling over who is responsible for what when so many people are getting sick.
"I say very clearly that we must accept that this is not a local health issue, this is not a provincial health issue. This is a national health emergency, it is a national pandemic," Paul said.
"What's happening right now doesn't work — that's clear. People are dying, we're in the midst of a second wave and we're not seeing any improvement."
Watch: 'We're not suggesting a one-size-fits-all policy for all of Canada,' says Paul:
Paul said that even the U.S., which has been criticized by some for its pandemic response, is further ahead on coming up with a cohesive, national response.
She said president-elect Joe Biden formed a coronavirus advisory board dominated by scientists and doctors shortly after he secured the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency.
That task force is chaired by former surgeon general Vivek Murthy, former Food and Drug Administration commissioner David Kessler and Yale University's Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith.
Biden has said the task force will take policy proposals and "convert [them] into an action blueprint."
"That plan will be built on bedrock science ... I'll spare no effort, none, or any commitment, to turn around this pandemic."
The Public Health Agency of Canada already has established a "health portfolio operations centre" that coordinates the federal response with international, provincial and territorial partners. Dr. Theresa Tam, the chief public health officer, is also in close contact with provincial and territorial chief medical officers of health to share information and coordinate response efforts.