Politics

Delaying Parliament's return until Nov. 22 will affect COVID-19 benefits: NDP

Peter Julian, the NDP's leader in the House of Commons, has written to the government complaining about its decision to delay the return of Parliament.

Recovery, sickness and caregiver benefits can only be extended until Nov. 20 without new legislation

Peter Julian, the NDP's leader of the House of Commons, says delaying the return of Parliament until Nov. 22 means some pandemic supports will expire before they can be renewed. (CBC)

Peter Julian, the NDP's leader of the House of Commons, has written to the government complaining about its decision to delay the return of Parliament. 

Julian said delaying MPs' return to the House until Nov. 22 will mean that emergency COVID-19 benefits will expire before Parliament can renew them. 

The Canada Recovery Benefit, and others set up by the government to help Canadians through the pandemic, are due to expire on Saturday.

The cabinet can extend most COVID-19 benefits until Nov. 20 without a new law, but a new bill would have to be passed through Parliament to extend them beyond that date.

The emergency benefits, set up by the government to help Canadians and businesses hit by the pandemic, could then be applied retroactively, but Parliament would have to pass a law first.  

Two benefits — the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy and the Canada Emergency Rent Subsidy — could be extended until Nov. 30 without a new law. 

In his letter to Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland and government House leader Pablo Rodriguez, Julian said that delaying the return of MPs for more than two months after the election is "indefensible." 

He said the "very late return date" would not give MPs the time to pass legislation to prevent loss of support for people in the fourth wave.

'There is no reason Parliament can't act quickly'

The government has not said if it plans to extend the COVID-19 benefits further, but Rodriguez's office says that when Parliament returns there will be an "immediate focus" on the benefits people and businesses rely on during the pandemic. 

It hinted that, with co-operation from opposition parties, action could be taken on COVID-19 supports swiftly once Parliament returns.

The prime minister plans to call the leaders of opposition parties this week to discuss "the priorities that Canadians have for us all," Mark Kennedy, spokesperson for Rodriguez, told The Canadian Press.

He said the government is committed "to finding common ground in this Parliament and to working with other parties." 

"As we said on Friday, one of the immediate areas of focus when Parliament returns on Nov. 22 will be COVID-19 support benefits that many Canadians and businesses still rely on," Kennedy said. 

"We will work collaboratively with all parliamentarians on this issue. There is no reason Parliament can't act quickly if parties work together to do the right thing."

Rodriguez's office also said all MPs should be fully vaccinated, unless they have a valid medical reason, before they "set foot on the floor of the House of Commons." 

Julian said in his letter that because the Sept. 20 election returned a minority Liberal government like last time, "there is no justification for a more than two-month delay in recalling the House."

"In the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 crisis and the impacts of a fourth wave, this delay is even more indefensible. As you know full well, the Canada Recovery Benefit and other emergency benefits for individuals and for businesses will be expiring in the coming weeks, and legislative change is needed to extend these beyond November," his letter said. 

The government has already extended COVID-19 benefits, including the Canada Recovery Benefit, for people who have lost income due to the pandemic.

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