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Archives - Press Room


MINISTER DION OUTLINES VISION FOR SOCIAL UNION

OTTAWA, ONTARIO, November 18, 1996 – Stéphane Dion, President of the Privy Council and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, spoke to the Ottawa Canadian Club today about his vision for the Canadian social union, which he termed one "of the most important arguments for Canadian unity."

"One of Mr. Bouchard’s arguments during last year’s referendum campaign was that Canada had abandoned its traditions of promoting social justice and generosity towards those in need," observed Mr. Dion. However, the Minister noted, "getting our economic house in order does not contradict the goal of preserving our social contract. In fact, the one is a prerequisite to the other."

Given the "tremendous progress made towards putting Canada’s economy back on a sound basis," Mr. Dion predicted that the federal government, in cooperation with its provincial counterparts, "will increasingly focus on the renewal of Canada’s social union." This "will not be simply an exercise in cost-cutting or division of powers between governments, but in focusing all government programs, federal or provincial, on a common objective: providing a better quality of public service that meets the genuine needs of people," stated the Minister.

Mr. Dion observed that "there is widespread agreement that the federal and provincial governments must cooperate to preserve the social safety net." However, the Minister argued, renewing our social union cannot be limited to "preserving the fundamentals of our existing system, but also requires a creative response to new problems and new priorities."

Prominent among those priorities, according to the Minister, is "the scourge of child poverty." Mr. Dion predicted that a joint federal-provincial response to this issue will point "towards another trend in the evolution of the Canadian social union: the two levels of government working cooperatively, but focusing on those tasks that each level of government is best equipped to perform."

The Minister noted that, unfortunately, the Quebec government "has chosen not to be a full participant" in the new federal-provincial forum on improving our social union, and that Premier Bouchard has "tried to justify this non-participation on the basis of Quebec’s traditional constitutional positions." Mr. Dion countered that "a more nuanced picture" shows "a history of pragmatism and cooperation working within the constitutional framework between Ottawa and Quebec City on social policy going back to the 1930s in order to ensure the best quality of service to citizens." The Minister indicated that he hopes the Quebec government will continue the tradition of preserving subsidiarity and provincial autonomy while working in solidarity with other Canadians to strengthen the social union.

"This is a great collective project. Quebecers must be a full part of it," said Mr. Dion, concluding that "there are many areas where constructive cooperation is possible without diminishing Quebec’s autonomy."

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For information: Gilles Pineau
Press Secretary
(613) 943-1838.
 


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Last Modified: 1996-11-18  Important Notices