FCM

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The penny tax monster under your bed

As Don Martin noted, Maxime Bernier’s script last week was focused on the idea that the NDP was proposing a new infrastructure tax.

This seems to have become a thing last week. Sun News learned about it on Tuesday. And the Prime Minister referenced it during a news conference on Friday.

The story originates with a proposal Olivia Chow submitted to the Transport committee on October 28. Ms. Chow proposed that the committee “should explore the topic of infrastructure funding and examine a comprehensive set of policy options. The committee’s recommendations should then inform Infrastructure Canada as the federal government designs a post-2014 long-term infrastructure investment plan.” Ms. Chow listed five “potential policies to examine,” the fourth of which was a “penny tax”—a “one percent municipally-levied value added sales tax.” (I’ve copy and pasted Ms. Chow’s proposal below in its entirety.)

The Conservatives might now wish to suggest that the NDP is proposing such a tax, but, when the committee discussed Ms. Chow’s proposed study on November 1, Conservative MP Ed Holder specifically asked Ms. Chow about the idea and Ms. Chow responded as follows (emphasis mine).

Mr. Chair, a few years ago, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities and the big city mayors came up with the one-cent GST proposal. If you want me to go and find details of how that one-cent GST works, I could do so. This is not a new idea. It is something that has been proposed by the municipalities and the big city mayors. They ran a big campaign on it.

Jack Layton 1950-2011

The NDP leader passed away at his home early this morning

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Policy alert

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities has survey answers from three parties.

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Jack Layton goes to town

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities annual general meeting this weekend will hear from all three leaders of the national parties—a relatively rare convergence of Messrs Harper, Ignatieff and Layton outside the House.

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Michael Ignatieff goes to town

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities annual general meeting this weekend will hear from all three leaders of the national parties—a relatively rare convergence of Messrs Harper, Ignatieff and Layton outside the House.

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Stephen Harper goes to town

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities annual general meeting this weekend will hear from all three leaders of the national parties—a relatively rare convergence of Messrs Harper, Ignatieff and Layton outside the House.

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ITQ Contest: Find the funding announcement!

According to PMO, the mysterious $2 billion in housing and homeless funding for which the Federation of Canadian Municipalities was so very, very grateful was promised earlier today by Environment Minister John Baird and outgoing HRDC Minister Monte Solberg, but as of right now, there is not a single story about it in the media, nor does the alleged announcement appear on the Conservative Party website, or the websites of either the Government of Canada or the FCM

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The promptitude of your gratitude

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities thanks the Conservatives for promising nearly $2 billion for housing and homelessness. Small problem: the Conservatives haven’t promised it yet. This is how a well-oiled campaign rolls….

Subject: Statement by FCM President on Conservatives’ $1.9 billion commitment to national housing and homelessness programs