Conservatives table another non-confidence motion to topple ‘most centralizing government in Canadian history’

The vote on the second non-confidence motion is set to happen on Tuesday

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre was not in the House of Commons on Thursday to present the new motion, instead leaving it to Quebec MP Luc Berthold to take some swings at the Bloc Québécois and the NDP for supporting the minority government in confidence votes.

The motion reads as follows: “That, given that, after nine years, the government has doubled housing costs, taxed food, punished work, unleashed crime, and is the most centralizing government in Canadian history, the House has lost confidence in the government and offers Canadians the option to axe the tax, build the homes, fix the budget and stop the crime.”

Berthold referred to what Poilievre called the “promise of Canada” that the Conservative leader said no longer existed because of the Liberals.

“Like me, a majority of Quebecers and Canadians are probably extremely disappointed because this prime minister is not at Rideau Hall at this moment, is not in front of the Governor General to request the dissolution of his government,” said Berthold, addressing the Commons in French.

The next election is scheduled for October 2025, but because the Liberals don’t control a majority of seats in Parliament, the opposition parties can force a snap election if they defeat the government on a confidence motion or a money bill. 

Poilievre’s first motion declaring non-confidence in the government and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau failed Wednesday by a count of 211-120.

During the debate on the motion, Conservative MP Dan Albas took some shots at the Bloc, asking them why they wanted to become “the new NDP.”

“The Bloc Québécois is not supporting the government, the Bloc Québécois is simply not bringing down the government,” responded Bloc MP Xavier Barsalou-Duval.

Barsalou-Duval said the Liberal government is at the “end of its life,” so his party is trying to make some gains.

“It’s like the equivalent of Jack and the Beanstalk,” said Albas, referring to a well-known fairy tale where a young boy sells his only cow. “They’re asking for some magic beans and that’s what the Liberal government will offer them, but they won’t grow anything.”

Government House leader Karina Gould ridiculed the Conservatives’ second attempt at bringing down her government.

“It’s a little awkward that we’re again here today just a few hours after the House voted non-confidence in the leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, but here we are,” she said. “There’s not the pomp and ceremony. In fact, it seems a little deflated in here.”

NDP MP Charlie Angus said he was “concerned” that Poilievre was not in the House.

“We have a leader of the Opposition who wants to bring down the government and he’s missing — I’m just worried something happened to him,” he added, with a note of sarcasm.

Poilievre appeared in question period later on Thursday and read his motion of non-confidence into the record, asking who could be opposed to it.

“Canadians,” shot back Gould.

The vote on the second non-confidence motion is set to happen on Tuesday. The Conservatives are expected to table other non-confidence motions; they get three more opposition days during the fall session when they could choose to do so.

In addition to the opposition days, there will be votes on financial matters, such as the Fall Economic Statement and supplementary estimates, that are always confidence votes. The Liberals’ new ways and means motion on capital gains tax will be a confidence vote too.

National Post
[email protected]

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our politics newsletter, First Reading, here.

Related Posts


This will close in 0 seconds