OTTAWA â The Peopleâs Party of Canada under the shepherding of Maxime Bernier will champion more privatized health care in Canada because, in his view, current wait times are unfair.
In his first sit-down interview on Question Period since taking on the new endeavour, Bernier told host Evan Solomon that if his current party-of-one forms government, he will follow through on a longstanding promise: ending the health transfers from the federal government to the provinces and territories. He also spoke more about his thoughts on diversity.
âI want to stop federal transfers in health care; itâs a provincial jurisdiction. So we want to lower our taxes at the federal level, and let the provinces tax for their own responsibility,â Bernier said, though he added that the equalization formula would stay.
In a follow-up exchange with CTVNews.ca Bernier clarified that he wants to leave it up to the provinces to âbe more accountable and experiment more instead of blaming the lack of money from Ottawa for their failure.â
He said that while he doesnât intend to tinker with the Canada Health Act, he sees room for allowing more privatized health care in Canada.
âIf you read the legislation pretty well, you see that you can have private delivery health care in Canada. So what I want, I just want a better system for Canadians,â Bernier said. âIf you look at other countries, they are having a mixed system and itâs a better system than us.â
Bernier said his objective is not making it so that wealthy people are able to access health services that others cannot. Rather, he cited the current wait times in Canada as a motivating factor.
âI donât want people to wait for when they need services, health care services. I donât want them to wait too long, and theyâre waiting too long right now,â Bernier said.
medically necessary treatment wait times have increased since the year before, as have wait times to see a general practitioner.
In the follow up with CTVNews.ca he also elaborated on his ideas for a healthcare system that includes more privatization.
He disputed that this would equate to a âtwo-tierâ system, rather he said it would be a âa universal system with public funding coupled with private delivery of services. You go to a private hospital but the government pays for it.â
He said the term two-tier is a âloaded buzzwordâ that implies the rich get better access, which he stated in the interview with Question Period that he is against.
While the term is considered politicized by some, generally it refers to a mixed system of public and private service.
This is one of a slate of policies Bernier is championing as part of the new federal party he unveiled on Friday. âIâm running on four principles: individual freedom; personal responsibility; fairness; and also respect,â Bernier said.
Unity over diversity
Another key issue for the Peopleâs Party will be promoting unity over diversity.
Prior to disaffecting from the federal Conservatives, Bernier faced criticism over a series of tweets in which he said âmore diversityâ will âdestroyâ what makes Canada great. He then said that more diversity will "divide us into little tribes" and bring "distrust, social conflict, and potentially violence."
In the Question Period interview airing Sunday, Bernier tried to further explain his position. He said that while this country has been built with the help of immigrants, and that our diversity is âa strength of our country,â perhaps itâs time to focus more on what unites Canadians.
âInstead of always promoting the diversity in our country, why not promote what unites us. Thatâs the most important.â
Bernier also wants to have a national conversation about Canadaâs current immigration ratio. He said that he is against âmass immigrationâ and suggested possibly bringing in more economic immigrants.
âMaybe we can question the ratio that we have in this country right now. We have economic immigrants, we have the reunification of family, and we have the refugees⌠I want to have a discussion about that,â he said.
Bernier denied that this view will attract racist or xenophobic supporters, saying that he doesnât want people who have those values in his party.
Eyeing disaffected voters
Bernier said that in addition to pulling in party faithful from the main three political parties, his party will make a deliberate effort to reach out to the 31.7 per cent of eligible voters that did not cast a ballot in the 2015 federal election.
âThereâs 30 per cent, 30 per cent of Canadians that didnât vote at the last election, so why didnât they vote? Because they donât believe in politicians anymore. They donât believe in a politician who's saying something one day and saying the opposite the other day,â Bernier said.
Bernier said he is confident that he will be able to run candidates across the country, citing his current levels of support and money raised so far, said that come January the party could be in a very different position.
âWe are doing politics differently. We arenât trying to please every special interest group, we are speaking for Canadians, and we have policies that we think are the best for the prosperity for this country⌠so we can attract a lot of people under our umbrella,â he said.
Bernier also had a message to his detractors, including his former Conservative colleagues who questioned his work ethic.
âWhy are they so afraid? If Iâm lazy, this party wonât be a success if Iâm lazy.â