Fear and frustration about Carney’s anticipated austerity measures and cuts to healthcare or social programs for vulnerable groups to pay for his pledge to boost NATO defence spending to five per cent of the GDP by 2035 were also discussed.
The defence spending expected to cost more than $150 billion — more than the amount transferred to provinces for healthcare — could be better spent on housing or other social programs, noted the MPs.
Carney has no mandate from voters for such massive spending to appease US President Donald Trump, said Jenny Kwan, MP for Vancouver East.
“Trump is driving our political agenda here through Carney,” Kwan said.
“He says he’s, ‘elbows up,’ but [we say] elbows up against Trump and the tariffs. Elbows up for Canada and sovereignty, and elbows up for Canada's identity because we are not the United States.”



