it seems there’s not much canadians politically agree on these days. which is why it was heartening to see that regardless of partisan allegiances or regional differences, most canadians agree that it’s long past time the federal government funded a disability benefit.
an
angus reid survey released this week revealed that an overwhelming nine in ten canadians support a federal disability benefit. this support comes from conservative voters (88 per cent), liberals (98 per cent), ndp (99 per cent) and bloc quebecois voters (98 per cent).
moreover, seven in ten canadians believe that the federal government is moving too slowly to roll out the benefit. most respondents don’t trust the government will deliver on their promise of a benefit at all.
parliament passed legislation last year to move forward with the canada disability benefit (cdb), a program intended to supplement provincial disability benefits and pull disabled canadians out of poverty; but the benefit has not yet been budgeted or rolled out, despite initially being proposed as far back as 2020.
the federal budget, to be released next week, will determine if canadians’ pessimism is unfounded or fair.
we’ll soon find out if the federal government has been listening to canadians – and to their own members of parliament. more than one third of liberal mps
recently signed a letter to prime minister justin trudeau and finance minister chrystia freeland urging them to budget the benefit this fiscal cycle.