Wednesday, December 24, 2025
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

NDP withdraws support from Liberal gov’t, ending supply-and-confidence agreement 

|
|

On Sept. 4, Jagmeet Singh announced via X that the New Democratic Party (NDP) is prematurely withdrawing from their supply-and-confidence agreement with the Liberal government. 

The supply-and-confidence (SACA) agreement between the NDP and the Liberal government was instated in March 2022 and planned to last until June 2025. The agreement meant support from the NDP on the Liberal’s decisions on issues of budgeting, specifically “on budgetary policy, budget implementation bills, estimates and supply” and votes of confidence, according to a news release from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.  

The agreement would not allow the NDP to move, nor vote for, any type of non-confidence motion against the Liberal government.  

In exchange for committing to the SACA, the Liberal government promised to prioritize tackling issues valued by the NDP. 

Although the NDP managed to pass several important laws through the leverage this deal gave them, like replacement worker legislation, 10 annual sick days for employees of federally regulated workplaces and the Sustainable Jobs Act, the cost of strategically supporting the Liberal government was not worth it to Singh. 

In his announcement, Singh said Justin Trudeau will “always cave to corporate greed,” calling the Liberal party “too weak, too selfish and too beholden to corporate interests to fight for people.” 

Singh finished his announcement by encouraging Canadians to choose “hope” in the next election and to support the NDP’s goals of restoring financial relief and improving healthcare for Canadians. 

The NDP’s withdrawal from supporting the Liberal government comes only a few days before Montreal’s byelection to replace the resigned Liberal MP David Lametti. With a record 91 candidates, there was a clear need for the NDP to establish themselves and make their issues with the Liberal party evident to voters. 

Several NDP priorities that were supposed to be fulfilled under the SACA are now up in the air with the rescinding of the agreement. These priorities include the national dental care program, which currently only covers 2.4 million Canadians but was intended to cover approximately nine million according to CBC News reports, and the creation of a national pharmacare program. 

Looking forward, the NDP’s lack of support for the Liberals places the government on unsteady footing. Since the Liberals hold a minority of seats in Parliament, 154 of 338, without the NDP’s vote of confidence they are more vulnerable to being subjected to an early election if they are faced with a non-confidence vote. 

Conservative party leader Pierre Poilievre is already planning to conduct a non-confidence motion against the Liberals as soon as possible, according to CBC News reports. His first chance to do so will be Wednesday, Sept. 25, when a vote on a Conservative motion is planned to occur. 

To maintain a vote of confidence, the Liberals would need MPs from opposing parties to vote in their support, thus an early election is not certain but now possible. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Bill 33: what students should know 

Ontario’s Bill 33, Supporting Children and Students Act, 2025, received Royal Assent on Nov. 20, creating a set of postsecondary law changes that will take effect only if and when the government proclaims Schedule 3. The schedule would require publicly assisted universities and colleges to publish admission criteria and access applicants on merit, authorize new regulations on admissions and student fees and require institutions to develop research security plans subject to ministerial directives. 

Aubrey Reeves presents findings on Canada’s Arts and Culture Sector 

On Dec. 1, the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre (PAC) hosted local arts leaders, policy advocates and community members for a presentation on new national research, highlighting the economic and social contributions of Canada’s arts and culture sector.

2025 Ontario environment policies: the battle between competitiveness and accountability 

The Canadian federal and Ontario provincial governments’ 2025 policy decisions were focused on affordability and competitiveness-focused responses to trade pressure and rising electricity demands. The influence of this on Ontario’s climate can be seen in all of the climate adjacent policy decisions made regarding energy, infrastructure, land-use and fiscal decisions that either increased the pace of low-carbon buildout or weakened environmental guardrails and climate accountability, depending on the file.

What’s happening with Canada’s latest pipeline proposal? 

The Canadian Federal Government is moving in lockstep with Alberta’s Provincial Government towards establishing a new bitumen pipeline through to British Columbia’s northern coast despite objections. 

Here’s what the Auditor General’s report reveals about Ontario’s healthcare  

The Auditor General of Ontario, Shelley Spence, provided a news release on a newly tabled report that audits performance in healthcare related areas across the province. The news release highlights physician billing, medical schools and access to healthcare with the procurement of personal protective equipment also making headlines separately.  

Kick off the semester with Frost Week and more 

Before the winter term kicks into high gear, BUSU aims to make sure that you still get your fill of Brock fun — meeting new people, reconnecting with friends and getting some much-needed social time through Frost Week.

Toronto’s Union Station using facial recognition for targeted advertising 

Reports of Toronto’s Union Station implementing the use of facial recognition software to better target advertising made media waves a few weeks ago. Here’s what students who may be using the station during this upcoming break should know.  

Alberta’s alarming dependence on the notwithstanding clause 

On Nov. 18, Alberta invoked the notwithstanding clause for the second time in under a month — a retaliatory move in the face of pushback from the judiciary that threatens the rights of trans youth and young women across the province.