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Opinion: If the Trudeau Liberals are annihilated in an election, it will be over housing – The Globe and Mail

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the federal Liberal government will be annihilated unless it pauses its carbon price increase in April. Thats not totally correct.

If the Trudeau Liberal government is annihilated in the next election, on an economic matter, it will be on carbon pricing but also broader, continuing inflation worries. And also concern about Canadas GDP slumping on a per capita basis. But mostly housing.

Premiers and Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre are seizing on the carbon price. But this is a much easier political feat because many Canadians are so angry about all the mounting costs of everything, particularly the money needed for four walls and a roof.

Yes, climate policies are incredibly important, as are the debates. Seven premiers are calling on the Prime Minister to abandon the April hike. When Justin Trudeau was in Calgary on Wednesday, he vigorously defended the carbon levy even after a private meeting where Albertas Danielle Smith hammered away on the topic.

The Prime Minister wouldnt be facing this ferocity from premiers if he hadnt done the heating oil carveout. It was a move that disproportionately benefited one electorally pertinent region, shattering a fragile cross-country acceptance of carbon pricing. His discussion Wednesday of his government being averse to using the heavy hand of government to regulate carbon emissions wasnt accurate. Besides the carbon tax, there are regulations, including those that would cap oil and gas emissions and set requirements for annual EV sales.

But all of this doesnt mean politicians should lose sight of the issue really shifting the vote: housing.

The Liberals arent responsible for all of this. But many arent likely to see that nuance when it comes to voting day, this year or next. Many predicted 2024 would be better on the housing front, but the early signs arent good.

Compared to two years ago in February, 2022, just before the start of interest rate hikes by the Bank of Canada, average asking rents in Canada have grown by 21 per cent, or $384 per month, said a report from Rentals.ca and Urbanation this week. The number of listings for shared accommodations, where tracked, surged 72 per cent in February, compared with a year earlier.

Outside of the rental market, many Canadians will also be renewing their mortgages at significantly higher rates than before, no matter the Bank of Canadas moves. Between 2024 and 2026, nearly 60 per cent of all outstanding mortgages are up for renewal. These numbers are a recipe for political upheaval in a country where theres always been a plot of space available, if you worked or went far enough afield.

Alberta is the prime example of the evolution. The provinces combination of ample work and housing affordability, a friend once quipped, allowed people to be grown-ups. Until recently, a person aged 25 to 34 in Ontario was more likely to be living at home with their parents in Barrie or Oshawa than in significantly larger Albertan cities such as Calgary and Edmonton.

That all could change. Rents are increasing because of a strong flow of newcomers. Alberta now has the fastest-rising prices, with the average cost for apartments up 20 per cent year-over-year. The housing crunch is playing out in other parts of the world, but is arguably more dramatic in Canada for a host of reasons, including that the Liberals have increased immigration levels to heights rarely seen.

Many Canadians believe the federal Liberals are failing on this file, and increasingly believe owning a home is the realm of the rich. While younger voters, as a rule, are less inclined to support conservative parties than their older counterparts, thats not necessarily true in Canada. Thats according to analysis from John Burn-Murdoch, chief data reporter at the Financial Times. He compared 10 advanced economies last month, and found a Canadian 40-year-old is just as likely to say they will vote conservative as a 70-year-old. That contrasts with Britain, the United States, Australia and New Zealand, where an older age is far more correlated with voting for parties on the right.

After prime minister Brian Mulroney decided to implement the GST in 1991, his party was clobbered in the election two years later. Still, Mr. Mulroney who died last month always reflected that it was important to do what was right for Canada instead of being well-liked. This week, there was a Mulroney-like tenor to Mr. Trudeaus remarks on his commitment to his carbon pricing system.

My job is not to be popular, Mr. Trudeau said. My job is to do the right things for Canada now and do the right things for Canadians a generation from now.

But at this moment, not having a home is the crucial issue. Expectations, even dreams, are being annihilated.

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Opinion: If the Trudeau Liberals are annihilated in an election, it will be over housing - The Globe and Mail

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Trump defended over bloodbath speech as conservatives claim liberals are twisting his words – MSN

Trump defended over bloodbath speech as conservatives claim liberals are twisting his words  MSN

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Trump defended over bloodbath speech as conservatives claim liberals are twisting his words - MSN

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Liberals say Poilievre ‘doesn’t care’ about the housing shortage and mock his record | RCI – Radio-Canada.ca

Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser said Monday that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre doesn't really care about building more homes and is just whipping up fear and anxiety in order to get elected.

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a housing conference in Ottawa, Fraser said it's frustrating to see Poilievre pitch policies that prey on the anxieties of people who are very worried about buying a home without actually offering solutions.

Fraser recently releaseda three-minute video (new window)on social media. It blasts Poilievre's plan as a poor imitation of what the government is already doing to tackle a crisis that has left homes out of reach for many Canadians.

The video, entitled Pierre doesn't care, is similar in style toone Poilievre released earlier this year (new window)on the same topic. The video goes after the Tory leader's record as housing minister in the last Conservative government.

It's a sign that the Liberal government is starting to fight back against Poilievre, who has led his party to a commanding lead in the polls. Poll aggregator 338 Canada suggeststhe Conservatives enjoy an 18-point lead nationwide. Poilievre has made housing a central plank of his policy playbook.

WATCH:Federal minister pushes back against Conservatives on housing

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Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Sean Fraser accused the Conservatives of 'talking a big game to inspire a sense of fear or anxiety amongst the Canadian public.' On Saturday, Fraser posted a video to social media saying Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre doesnt care about building more homes.'

Poilievre has releaseda relatively detailed housing plan (new window)built arounda program that would tie federal funding for municipalities to housing starts.

Under his proposal, cities would have to increase the number of homes built by 15 per cent each year. Municipalities that fail to meet that target would see their federal grants withheld at a commensurate rate.

The Conservative plan also would make a $100 million fund available to cities that greatly exceed the target.

Fraser said that's a lot less than the government's existing $4 billion housing accelerator fund, which sends money to cities that cut housing-related red tape and allow more homes to be built on a particular plot of land.

The government has cut dozens of deals with cities using the accelerator fund agreements that Ottawa maintains will create hundreds of thousands of homes nationwide in the coming years.

Fraser also told conference attendees Monday that Ottawa will ramp up its low-interest construction loan program an initiative that will give developers access to cheaper cash if they build more homes.

He suggested there may be more funding for this program in the upcoming federal budget.

It's a program that doesn't necessarily cost Ottawa any money the expectation is that the loans will be paid back with interest but it leverages the government's superior credit rating to get more privately built homes on the market.

Citing Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation(CMHC) data,Fraser's social media video said that housing starts during Poilievre's tenure were lower than in any year of the Liberal government.

He wasn't very good at it and I'm not sure he even cared, Fraser said, while also criticizing the previousgovernment's track record on affordable housing and apartment construction.

Pierre's plan isn't going to solve the housing crisis because Pierre doesn't care about the people it impacts most, Fraser said. The thing Pierre cares about most is Pierre.

Poilievre and Fraser routinely spar in the House of Commons overthe housing issue.

Poilievre has blamed Fraser for the surge in international students during his time as immigration minister, while Fraser has said the Tory leader isn't up to the task of governing.

Poilievre has called Fraser the minister of photo-ops and media puff pieces. He's routinely called him incompetent.

Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre said nobody should take lessons on hate from a prime minister who wore blackface and racist costumes in the past.

Photo:La Presse canadienne / Ryan Remiorz

In Fraser's Nova Scotia, homeless encampments have popped up in Halifax in places where they never were before something Poilievre has cited as an indictment of the Liberals' housing record.

Trudeau told us that media darling Sean Fraser would reverse the Liberal housing crisis. What happened? Housing photo ops are up 100 per cent. Home building is down 7 per cent in 2023, Poilievre said in a social media post.

Poilievre is right about that last figure the CMHC's January report found that housing starts were down seven per cent in 2023 compared to the year before.

There were 223,513 units recorded last year, compared to 240,590 in 2022, according to CMHC data.

That drop is likely attributable to higher interest rates the Bank of Canada's hikes to tame inflation have made it more expensive to build anything.

But there were some bright spots in two of the country's largest cities, despite thechallenging interest rate environment.

Housing starts were 5 per cent and 28 per cent higher than in 2022 in Toronto and Vancouver, respectively, the CMHC said.

Speaking to reporters at the same housing conference Fraser attended, acting president and CEO of CMHC Michel Tremblaysaid there's a dire need for more supply to restore housing affordability.

CMHC projects the country needs to build 3.5 million more housing units by 2030 to meet explosive demand as the country's population expands, thanks in part to record immigration.

That number is quite daunting, Tremblay said.

John Paul Tasker (new window)CBC News

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Liberals say Poilievre 'doesn't care' about the housing shortage and mock his record | RCI - Radio-Canada.ca

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An expected defeat was unexpectedly painful for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals. That should set off alarm bells – Toronto Star

An expected defeat was unexpectedly painful for Justin Trudeau's Liberals. That should set off alarm bells  Toronto Star

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An expected defeat was unexpectedly painful for Justin Trudeau's Liberals. That should set off alarm bells - Toronto Star

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Liberals say Poilievre ‘doesn’t care’ about the housing shortage and mock his record – MSN

Liberals say Poilievre 'doesn't care' about the housing shortage and mock his record  MSN

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Liberals say Poilievre 'doesn't care' about the housing shortage and mock his record - MSN

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