Arnott says throne speech untrustworthy

As long as the Liberals remain in power there will be a shortage of jobs in Ontario, according to Well­ington Halton Hills MPP Ted Arnott.

 

He said last week that pro­m­ises in the recent Liberal throne speech just cannot be trusted.

“This one was mostly a repackaging of broken prom­is­es and old News,” he said.  “It may be called the Open Ontario Plan, but it’s actually a signal that, as long as the Liberals re­main in office, our province will remain closed to jobs and investment.”

Throne speeches are broad, general outlines of the gov­ern­ment’s plans, but are typically criticized for being devoid of specific policies and details. Having served in the Ontario for nearly 20 years in govern­ment and opposition, Arnott has heard many such speeches.

“We face very challenging circumstances in Ontario to­day,” he said, citing the pro­vince’s spiralling debt, its near­ly $25-billion deficit and its job-killing red-tape burden.

“The throne speech promised very little to reverse those trends.”

Credibility is a major prob­lem for this government, charg­ed Arnott.

“In previous throne speech­es, they promised to restrain spending, to reduce red tape and use of consultants, to close the coal-fired generating plants by 2009, to hire 9,000 nurses and to build 35,000 long-term care beds,” he said.

“None of these promises were kept.”

The government’s contro­versial Harmonized Sales Tax, or HST, merited no mention in its 2007 throne speech.  Intro­ducing that new tax has been the most significant decision the government has made since the 2007 election.

“What other surprises, I wonder, might be in store in the months ahead?” he asked.

The government has also yet to announce a plan to bring back the hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs lost over the last few years. Tourism was left out and agriculture merited only four lines in a 16-page speech.

“We need action on these priorities, and we need it now,” Arnott concluded.

 

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