DEVELOPING | Budget 2023 prioritizes pocketbook help and clean economy, deficit projected at $40.1B

British Columbia Premier David Eby says he's going into next week's health-care meeting between the premiers and prime minister with an open mind — and without a red line dollar ask for the federal government.
Canada’s premiers are set to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday after months of pushing for a sit down to hash out a health-care funding deal. They want the federal government to increase funds through the Canada Health Transfer from 22 per cent to 35 per cent of health-care costs, about an additional $28 billion a year.
But Eby told CTV’s Question Period host Vassy Kapelos, in an interview airing Sunday, he’s open to seeing what the federal government brings to the negotiating table, even if it’s not the full ask from the provinces.
And when pressed on whether he’s specifically looking for the federal government to increase the escalator — the percentage by which the federal government increases the Canada Health Transfer annually — the B.C. premier wouldn’t say.
“I'm not going into this meeting with any red lines,” Eby said. “I'm going to this meeting with mindset of how can I deliver health care for British Columbians? And what is the federal government going to be bringing to that shared responsibility that we both have?”
Eby said that after overcoming the “hurdle” of getting the premiers and the prime minister around the negotiating table, he hopes the federal government comes with a “good faith offer.”
“We're going to sit around the table and the prime minister is going to bring his offer, and it’s going to include, I assume, discussion around the escalator piece of it as well as what the core funding amount is going to be and how much is going to be allocated to this bilateral, all these technical things,” Eby said. “And we're going to sit down as premiers and come to a resolution with the prime minister.”
“I'm looking forward to that,” he said. “But that's going to happen at that table.”
Eby added he’s open to a bilateral agreement with the federal government to meet the needs of British Columbians specifically, as long as there’s also an agreement about core funding across the board for all the provinces.
“There are two hours that have been set for the meeting,” he said. “So obviously, this isn't going to be the meeting where we get to the deal.”
Other provinces, meanwhile, are sticking by their push for a 35-per-cent share of health-care costs from the federal government, and an increase to the escalator.
“I think it's important that we don't have a situation where we have an immediate influx of money and then we ended up bleeding back again,” Ontario Health Minister and Deputy Premier Sylvia Jones said on CTV’s Power Play Thursday. “We want a partner who's going to be there not for the short term, but for the long term as we have committed.”
U.S President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have announced updates on a number of cross-border issues, after a day of meetings on Parliament Hill.
More than 130,000 people have signed an e-petition calling on Canada to give transgender and non-binary people fleeing harmful laws in their home countries the right to claim asylum, but that's already possible in this country. Advocates say the popularity of the proposal shows politicians that Canadians want the government to affirm its welcoming position.
The Public Order Emergency Commission has concluded that the federal government met the threshold for invoking the Emergencies Act to bring an end to the 'Freedom Convoy' protests and blockades.
The federal government is pledging to increase health funding to Canada's provinces and territories by $196.1 billion over the next 10 years, in a long-awaited deal aimed at addressing Canada's crumbling health-care systems with $46.2 billion in new funding.
Governor of the Bank of Canada Tiff Macklem says he thinks Canada is 'turning the corner' on inflation, but he isn't ruling out that the country could enter a 'mild recession.' In an English-language broadcast exclusive interview with CTV National News Ottawa Bureau Chief Joyce Napier, Macklem encouraged Canadians to prepare a 'buffer' to withstand 'tougher times.'
Joe Biden comes for a sleepover next week to make Canada the 18th country he has visited since being sworn in as U.S. president, quite the protocol slippage from that fading, if not forgotten, tradition of Canada being the first foreign presidential pitstop, writes Don Martin in a column for CTVNews.ca.
After weeks of refusing to look further into foreign election interference, Justin Trudeau surrendered to intense pressure and appointed a 'special rapporteur' to review China's actions. In his exclusive column for CTVNews.ca, Don Martin writes this 'startling change of heart' suggests the PMO is in panic mode and reflects badly on the prime minister's decision making.
The Trudeau tipping point is within sight. The moment when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau knows he has to quit for the good of the party or the Liberals realize they can't survive re-election with him at the helm is almost upon us, Don Martin writes in an exclusive column for CTVNews.ca.
Bombshell revelations that suggest Chinese agents actively, fraudulently and successfully manipulated Canada's electoral integrity in the last two federal elections cannot be dismissed with the standard Justin Trudeau nothing-to-see-here shrug, Don Martin writes in his exclusive opinion column for CTVNews.ca.
The chances Trudeau's health-care summit with the premiers will end with the blueprint to realistic long-term improvements are only marginally better than believing China’s balloon was simply collecting atmospheric temperatures, Don Martin writes in an exclusive column for CTVNews.ca, 'But it’s clearly time the 50-year-old dream of medicare as a Canadian birthright stopped being such a nightmare for so many patients.'
In the 2023 federal budget, the government is unveiling continued deficit spending targeted at Canadians' pocketbooks, public health care and the clean economy.
The federal budget proposes an across-the-board three per cent spending cut for all departments and agencies, a belt-tightening move after years of massive growth in the federal public service.
The increase in excise duties on all alcoholic products is being temporarily capped at two per cent starting next month instead of a planned six per cent increase.
The federal budget shows the government's proposed dental-care insurance program will cost more than double what the Liberals originally thought, driving it up by another $7.3 billion over five years.
Tucked into the 2023 federal budget unveiled on Tuesday in Ottawa, the Liberals have announced plans to explore implementing a standard charging port across Canada, in an effort to save Canadians some money and reduce waste.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government plans to launch a National Counter-Foreign Interference Office, amid ongoing scrutiny of allegations that Beijing interfered in recent federal elections.
In the wake of another deadly mass shooting in America, that saw children as young as nine years old shot and killed, the gun control debate is going nowhere, writes CTV News political analyst Eric Ham.
Another American community is reeling after a shooter killed three 9-year-olds and three adults at a private Christian elementary school in Nashville. These are the three children and three adults whose lives were taken by the shooter.
Nashville police have released security camera footage of a suspected shooter entering the private Christian elementary school. The shooting claimed the lives of three children, all aged nine, and three adults.