The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/04/20 at 02:00 EDT
Episode Date: April 20, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/04/20 at 02:00 EDT...
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When they predict we'll fall, we rise to the challenge.
When they say we're not a country, we stand on guard.
This land taught us to be brave and caring, to protect our values, to leave no one behind.
Canada is on the line and it's time to vote as though our country depends on it.
Because like never before, it does.
I'm Jonathan Pedneau, co-leader of the Green Party of Canada.
This election, each vote makes a difference. Authorized by the Registeredleader of the Green Party of Canada, this election, each vote makes
a difference.
Authorized by the registered agent of the Green Party of Canada.
From CBC News, the world is sour.
I'm Neil Kumar.
Liberal leader Mark Carney has unveiled his costed election platform.
It proposes billions in new spending, but also promises a deficit that shrinks over
the next four years.
Karina Roman reports.
The biggest expenditures in the Liberal platform are the previously announced income tax cut,
the scrapping of the capital gains tax changes, and the Build Canada Homes plan for affordable
housing.
There's $18 billion in new defence spending that the Liberals say would get Canada to
the 2% of GDP spending target before 2030.
Overall, there's $130 billion over four years of new measures, with the deficit projected
downwards from nearly 62 billion this year to 47 billion in 2029.
Liberal leader Mark Carney.
The numbers do add up very much. That is how
you meet the moment. That is how you meet a crisis. There are a slew of new promises
in the costed platform, including a comprehensive review of government programs estimated to
save the government $28 billion. The Liberals account for counter-tariff revenues only for
this year, signaling their hope that the trade war with the US will get settled. Carina Roman, CBC News, Peterborough, Ontario.
The New Democrats have also released their election platform. It contains
billions of dollars in both new spending and revenues. The NDP says much of the
spending is about helping the middle class while wealthy Canadians and CEOs
will pay for it. David Thurton reports.
That's why today I'm proud to share our campaign commitments.
Jagmeet Singh says the NDP's platform is focused on workers.
The document contains massive commitments to public health care.
The party would spend $46 billion over four years to provide every Canadian with a family
doctor, expand pharmacare,
and improve mental health coverage.
We'll make mental health care part of public health care.
No more waiting, no more choosing between your well-being and your bank account.
These and other measures will worsen the federal bottom line, the NDP admits, adding $48 billion to the projected deficit
over four years. The NDP plans to offset that with taxing those who are extremely wealthy.
The party expects that that measure alone could generate more than $94 billion in federal
revenues. David Thurton, CBC News, Burnaby.
On a campaign stop in B.C leader Pierre Poliev announced that he would impose
mandatory drug treatment for those suffering from addiction to illegal narcotics like fentanyl.
This policy is not about punishment, it's about redemption.
It's about getting people off the streets and out of addiction, back into a society
where they can live rich, fulfilling lives and take full advantage of the Canadian
promise.
Those convicted of possessing small amounts of narcotics but not committing violent offenses
could get treatment instead of prison.
Meantime, Bloc Québécois leader Yves-Francois Blanchet is reaffirming his party's goals
for clean energy.
The CBC's Evan Dyer has more.
Many Quebec reporters asking Yves-Francois Blanchet about his position on pipelines.
We have seen a shift in public opinion on pipelines. The energy east proposal, of course,
was broadly rejected a few years ago, but public opinion in Quebec is quite a bit more sympathetic
to the idea of east-west pipelines carrying Canada's fossil fuels to the coast to export to
Asian and European markets. The bloc though remains firmly opposed to that and
Yves-Francois Blanchet has continued to say that he's in favor of a clean energy
corridor running into the United States. His argument is that the natural
corridors for energy in North America run north-south not east-west and that
Quebec serves the
market of New England, which he says is opposed to Donald Trump.
And in fact, he has generally minimized the threat of Donald Trump on the campaign trail.
He said that even if public opinion continues to shift in Quebec, he's going to remain opposed.
Evan Dyer, CBC News, MaGog, Quebec.
And that is your World is Sour. For CBC News, I'm Evan Dyer, CBC News, my goal is Quebec. And that is your World is Sour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.