Fuck veterans, says Trudeau
Feb 1, 2020
Trudeau has shut down veterans’ calls for more funding in the past and has fought veterans in court.
tnc.news
Veterans never saw the $105 million promised to them by Trudeau in 2019
Veterans did not see a penny of the $105 million
promised to them by Justin Trudeau last year.
The sum remained untouched, despite being earmarked for Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC).
Since 2018, the Liberal government has failed to deliver on $327 million worth of funds promised to help veterans, according to
Global News.
Trudeau has shut down veterans’ calls for more funding in the past and has
fought veterans in court.
In 2018, during a town hall meeting, Trudeau was
questioned by former corporal Brock Blaszczyk on why he continued to fight veterans groups in court while also re-integrating former ISIS fighters and awarding Omar Khadr several million dollars in an out-of-court settlement.
In response to the question, the prime minister told the former corporal that some veterans were asking too much of the government.
“Why are we still fighting against certain veterans’ groups in court? Because they are asking for more than we are able to give right now,” Trudeau told Blaszczyk, who lost his leg to a roadside bomb while serving in Afghanistan.
CANADA
Liberals left $105M meant for veterans unspent in last fiscal year
BY
BRIAN HILL GLOBAL NEWS
Posted January 31, 2020 11:40 am
3:20
WATCH (September 2018): Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government is doing what it damned Stephen Harper’s Conservatives for doing: leaving hundreds millions of dollars unspent at the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has broken a promise made to veterans by allowing $105 million earmarked for Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC) to go unspent in the 2018-19 fiscal year.
The money was left unused by VAC and sent back to the government’s general “fiscal framework,” according to documents obtained by Global News.
READ MORE: Trudeau Liberals leave $372M meant to help veterans unspent since taking office
In September 2018, Global News reported that the Liberals allowed more than $372 million meant for veterans to go unspent during their first three years in office.
This revelation came seven months after Trudeau told a Canadian Armed Forces member during a town hall meeting in Edmonton that some veterans groups in Canada were “asking for more” than the government could afford to give.
11:59
Trudeau slams Harper for unspent funding on veterans during 2015 campaign
It also followed comments Trudeau made during the 2015 election campaign slamming former prime minister Stephen Harper and the Conservatives for leaving roughly $1.1 billion meant for veterans unspent while they were in office.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW ADVERTISEMENT
“Canadians know this is wrong, a government led by me would make it right,” Trudeau said during an August 2015 stump speech.
Defying Parliament
In November 2018, about a month after Global News reported the $372 million in lapsed funding, the House of Commons voted unanimously to support an NDP motion that said all unspent money at VAC should “automatically carry forward” to the next year for the “sole purpose” of improving services for veterans.
The motion said this money should continue carrying forward each year until VAC meets all of its service standards for providing care to veterans.
READ MORE: Parliament unanimously approves plan to stop leaving money unspent at Veterans Affairs Canada
According to the government’s most recent
statistics, VAC is failing to meet 15 of 24 service standards, including wait times for accessing disability payments, long-term care, rehabilitation, vocational training and health benefits.
The government, meanwhile, says it has increased annual funding for veterans by more than a billion dollars a year since 2016, providing roughly $4.4 billion directly to veterans and their families last year.
“Ensuring veterans and their families get the support they need is our number one priority. With respect to benefits, every single eligible veteran who comes forward will get the benefits they need,” said Alex Wellstead, a spokesperson for Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW ADVERTISEMENT
Regarding lapsed funding, Wellstead said budgets are based on estimates. VAC also says that any money returned to the government’s general fund is available for services in the following year.
Wellstead also said that current backlogs for accessing veterans’ services are “unacceptable.”
He added that the government is processing more applications than ever before, going from 29,000 in 2015 to 54,000 in 2019.
1:23
NDP leader Jagmeet Singh proposes plan to ‘end the theft’ of funding at Veterans Affairs
In total, the Liberals have allowed $477 million budgeted for VAC to go unspent since 2015.
“We have a lot of veterans with major needs and concerns,” said NDP veterans affairs critic Rachel Blaney.
“To see another year gone by with lapsed spending really makes us question what is the dedication to getting these resources into services that support veterans.”