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NDP Articles

  • November 10, 2011

    In the days leading up to Remembrance Day, our thoughts turn to the contributions of the men and women who served our country and gave their lives in times of war and peace. Millions of Canadians will gather at cenotaphs, community centres, and Legion halls to honour the living, remember the fallen and thank active Canadian Forces and RCMP personnel.

  • October 14, 2011

    OTTAWA — To hear Prime Minister Stephen Harper tell it, when it comes to the economy, blame others, because there's nothing to see here.

    It seems that more and more Canadian families disagree.

    Just this week, Harper was again quick to point the finger at others for economic troubles, calling on the G20 internationally to act so that he doesn't have to.

    The same week, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said that while American families have reason to be concerned about their economic insecurity, Canadian families have nothing to worry about.

  • April 12, 2011

    Sheila Fraser, Auditor General of Canada
    Stephen Harper, Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
    Michael Ignatieff, Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada
    Gilles Duceppe, Leader of the Bloc Quebecois

    I am writing to you in an attempt to get agreement to release the final version of the Auditor General’s report on the $50-million of spending on last year’s G8 summit.

  • July 9, 2010

    June 14, Charlottetown Guardian

    For many Canadians, working life will end with a sudden drop through our social safety net into an old age of crushing poverty. The majority have no workplace pension, and one in three Canadians will retire with no savings at all. Public pensions should be a life-saving cushion, but the maximum Canada Pension Plan (CPP) benefit is only $11,000.

  • March 23, 2010

    By Jack Layton, as published in the Mark

    When Canadians voted Tommy Douglas our “Greatest Canadian” in 2004, we honoured a man whose example sets the highest bar for today’s political leaders. A portrait of the preacher from Weyburn hangs in my Centre Block office, watching over every meeting with every delegation from every corner of this country. A momentary meeting of the eyes often brings to mind Tommy’s essential teachings.

  • March 1, 2010

    Dear Mr. Speaker:

    I write to you today to inform you of my request to hold an emergency debate on recent advice given by the Prime Minister to Her Excellency, the Governor General, requesting that the second session of the 40th parliament be prorogued. I do not make this request out of any question of the role of Her Excellency, but rather because I believe the judgement of the Prime Minister in offering such advice was deeply flawed.

  • February 8, 2010

    Jack Layton, National Post

    Stephen Harper's recent announcement that Canada will be making maternal and child health a top priority at June's G8 meeting makes him a welcome latecomer to the issue. While other countries have been delivering full-fledged support for maternal and child health since 2007, pledging $5.3-billion dollars to the cause last year alone, Canada has been virtually invisible on the issue. Rather than marking a new approach of principled humanitarianism, this announcement highlights years of Canadian inaction on the health of women and children under Mr. Harper's watch.

  • January 5, 2010

    Late on the cold, snowy night of January 4, 1996, my wife Olivia Chow and I, both city councillors at the time, were walking up Spadina Ave. As we walked, we checked on the well-being of the homeless we passed and discussed the problem of poverty in Toronto.

    The next morning I woke to learn that a homeless man, Eugene Upper, had frozen to death that night on the opposite side of Spadina from where we’d walked. Since that day, I have redoubled my efforts to prevent homelessness and eliminate poverty.

  • December 4, 2009

    By Jack Layton

    Next summer, if the Harper Conservatives and McGuinty Liberals have their way, a haircut will cost you eight percent more. Burying a loved one will cost eight percent more. Vitamins, a pair of sneakers, postage stamps, vet fees for your dog, and an oil change for your car will all cost eight percent more. Even the price of gas will go up. That’s going to hurt a lot of families, seniors, young people and small business.

  • March 30, 2009

    Many of us pay into Employment Insurance for years. Most of us rarely give it a second thought, but when we do, it's a comforting one. We think EI will be there when we need it. But the truth is that Employment Insurance is failing the middle class.

    Unfair eligibility rules, insufficient benefits and the two-week waiting period are making things tough for many of the 300,000 Canadians thrown out of work since the last federal election. As few as 40 per cent of workers, and just three in 10 women, qualify for EI. Many miss out even if they've been paying in for years.

  • February 19, 2009

    Dear Mr. President,

    I join with all Canadians in welcoming you to Canada. Our two countries share the world's longest common border. With that comes mutual responsibility and a unified sense of purpose. By working together, our economies can come out of this recession faster, greener and stronger in a more prosperous North America.