A round-up of federal party platforms and CBC's platform fact checks - Action News
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Politics

A round-up of federal party platforms and CBC's platform fact checks

The team at CBC News has tried to keep the parties honest by fact-checking key claims made by the leaders and their platforms.

All six major federal parties have published election platforms

Top row, from left: Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh. Bottom, from left: Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, BQ Leader Yves-Franois Blanchet, People's Party of Canada Leader Maxime Bernier. (CBC News)

Party platforms play a huge rolein helping many voters make up their minds in time for election day.

They offer a direct look at each party'spriorities and explainhow they would try to achieve them.

All six major parties have publishedplatforms, though some waiteduntil later into the campaign than others to do so.

This wasthe first federal election in which parties had the option of having individual promises costed by the non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer, giving voters another tool to weigh campaign commitments.

The team at CBC News has tried to keep the parties honest by fact-checking key claims made by the leaders and their platforms. Below is a round up ofelements of each party'splatform, with links to some relevant fact checks.

Liberals

The Liberal election platform is calledForward: A Real Plan for the Middle Class:

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You can browse the Parliamentary Budget Officer's costing of promises submitted by the Liberals here.

As the incumbent party, the Liberals have found themselves defending their majority government's recordwhile emphasizingtheir vision for the country's future.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has devoted a lot of energy to highlightingthe steps his government has taken to curb rising global temperatures, including the controversial carbon tax.

The Liberals' have adopted policies that would get us three-quarters of the way to fulfillingemissions reductionsfirst set by Stephen Harper's Conservative government.Their rivals, especially the Green Party, argue that those targets are notambitious enough.

Trudeau also committed to getting Canada on track to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, the core goal of the most recent United Nations climate summit a promise that could prove politically troublesome, given opposition from Conservatives at both the federal and provincial levels.

The Liberal leader has also boasted that his government cut taxes for the "middle class"by dropping the tax rate on earnings between $45,282 and $90,563 to 20.5 per cent from 22 per cent. The Department of Finance calculates the move has benefited more than nine million people.

The Liberals have promised to raiseraise the basic personal income tax deduction to $15,000 for people earning under $147,000 meaning those people would only pay taxes onincome over that amount. Such a policy would benefit low-income earners the most.

Trudeau's campaign also has rolled out a set of gun control policies, including a promise to allow municipalities to enact local handgun bans. But weapons experts have expressed doubts about how effective municipal bans would be in curbing gun crime.

Conservatives

The Conservative platform is called Andrew Scheer's Plan for You to Get Ahead:

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You can browse the non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer's costing of promises submitted by the Conservativeshere.

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer has run a campaign largely focused on pocketbook issues and saving taxpayers money.

A key part of fulfilling those promises is a commitment to scrap the carbon tax introduced by the Trudeau Liberals. While the Tories have made misleading claims about what it would cost Canadians to keep the carbon levy, Scheer says that repealing it would be his government's first order of business.

The party rolled out its own package of climate change proposals that it says would give the countryits "best chance" to meet our Paris Agreement emissions reduction target. Thatclaim has been thoroughly rejected by experts in the field.

The Conservative campaign has also proposed a cut to the income tax rate for the lowest bracket, from 15 per cent to 13.75 per cent by 2023. One economist called the proposal"unambiguously more progressive" than the "middle class" tax cut introduced by the Liberals.

The Conservative leader has also promised a host of boutique tax credits, though some experts have questioned whether they would actually influencetaxpayers' behaviour.

Further, Scheer has said he would roll back a series of small business tax changes implemented by the Liberals in 2017 and 2018. Trudeau has attacked the proposal, saying it would amount to a tax cut of $50,000 for "multi-millionaires." That's an oversimplification, but the Tory pledge would benefit wealthy owners of private corporations the most.

The Conservatives also have committed to balancing the federal budget by the 2024-2025 fiscal year. Their path back to black includesvows to endcorporate subsidies and slashCanada's foreign aid budget by 25 per cent.

New Democrats

The NDP's election platform is calledA New Deal for People: New Democrats' Commitments to You:

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You can browse the non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer's costing of promises submitted by the NDPhere.

The NDP's campaign includes ambitious proposalsaimed at closinggaps in the country's social safety net and curbing climate change. Some of the key pledges, however, come with a high degree of fiscaluncertainty.

Prominent among those promises is a commitment to implement universal pharmacare for all Canadians, whether they have insurance or not,within the first two years of an NDP government's mandate. The party says the programwould save an average family about $500 each year.

The New Democrats also have said they would establish a national dental care program for uninsured Canadians with household incomes below $90,000 in their first year in government. Many health care experts praised the plan, though some cautioned that key details that would determine the feasibility of the promisewere left unanswered.

On the campaign trail, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has argued that inexplicably expensive cellular plans are adding the affordability burden many families face. He said that an NDP government would put a price cap on cell plans until costs come down.

Further, Singh pledged to build 500,000 affordable homes over the next decade, with half of them to be constructed within five years. The NDP also claims that its climate change plan could create about 300,000 new jobs, which experts said is not an unrealistic figure.

As for paying for their commitments, the New Democrats say they would impose a new wealth tax on Canadians with fortunes of $20 million or more, increase the corporate tax rate and levy a foreign home buyers tax.

Greens

The Greens' election platform is calledHonest. Ethical. Caring. Leadership:

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You can browse the non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer's costing of promises submitted by the Greenshere.

Taken together, the Greens' commitments would amount to a fundamental reordering of Canadian society, a reality that leader Elizabeth May has embraced and promoted on the campaign trail.

Naturally, the environment is front and centre in their platform. The Greens have promised to set a new emissions reduction target for Canada of 60 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. That's double our current targetand in line with recommendations from the International Panel on Climate Change.

May also says that a Green government would put Canada on course to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

The party has also committed to retrofitting every single building in the country, re-training fossil fuel workers for jobs in a new green economy, scrapping all fossil fuel subsidies andcancelling the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

Like the NDP, the Greens have promised to implement a universal pharmacare program. They have also pledged toprovide free dental care for low-income Canadians.

To find new sources of revenue, May says she would raise the corporate tax rate from 15 to 31 per cent and tax some financial transactions.

The Greens initially faced criticism about their platform costing. The party revised some of its numbers and was able to rebut some scepticism, though questions remain about its fiscal feasibility.

Bloc Qubcois

The Bloc's election platform is calledLe Qubec, c'est nous(Quebec is us):

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You can browse the non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer's costing of promises submitted by Blochere.

Unsurprisingly, the Bloc's platform is focused largely on advancing the interests of Quebec.

That includes a call for Ottawa to hike transfers to the province for health, social programs and education by 6 per cent annually for four years, representing an additional $17 billion going to Quebec.

The Bloc would also increase federal spending by $54 billion over four years, which would be partly paid for by introducing a new tax on internet giants, cracking down on tax havens and ending tax breaks for the oil and gas sector.

The party's platform also includes something they've dubbed "green equalization."

Essentially, a Bloc government would force provinces in which per capita emissions are higher than the Canadian average to pay more carbon tax, and that money would be redistributed to provinces making the most progress on curbing emissions. Quebec would benefit considerably from this plan, since its hydroelectric power generation has put it closest among provinces to achieving its emissions targets.

The Bloc has also promised to frustrate any attempt by the federal government to interfere in the future of Bill 21.

Bloc LeaderYves-FranoisBlanchetalso says he supports both a reduction in immigration levels and a so-called "values test" for newcomers.

People's Party of Canada

The People's Party of Canada has not posted a single platform document. Instead, it has published its various policy proposals individually. The list can be found here.

The PPC did not provide a costing document and did not submit any of its commitments for costing by the non-partisan Parliamentary Budget Officer.

PPC Leader Maxime Berniersays his main priorities are slashing immigrations levels,balancing the budgetand re-evaluating any plans to fight climate change.

Bernier says that he does not believe there is a climate emergency and the PCC would abandon the Paris Agreement and scrap "unrealistic" emissions reduction targets.

The PPC says it would balance the federal budget within two years by cutting corporate welfare, foreign development aid andthe subsidy for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and by ending equalization payments for the provinces.

The party would cut immigration to between 100,000 and 150,000 entrants per year and put a focus on skilled immigration. In promoting his immigration plan, Bernier has made a false claim about so-called "subsidized" immigrants.

With files from Abby Plener, Earvin Solitario and Lucas Powers

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