(Quebec) Prime Minister François Legault refuses to commit to working with Québec solidaire (QS) to pass his Bill 198 which would expand the scope of the Françoise David law in order to better protect seniors from evictions.
“Is the Prime Minister open to discussing with other parties to better protect senior tenants? », Launched the parliamentary leader of QS, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, during the question period in the National Assembly on Wednesday.
However, François Legault avoided answering, preferring to deflect the question to criticize QS.
“The real housing problem is that there is a lack of housing compared to the high demand, among other things because of temporary immigrants who have increased by more than 230,000 over the past two years. QS refuses to see this problem and still thinks that it is by putting more constraints on owners that we will solve the problem. We do not agree with this approach,” said the Prime Minister.
The CAQ government nevertheless agreed to call the bill QS.
The Prime Minister also took the opportunity to praise his government’s record on policies for seniors. He recalled that Housing Bill 31, adopted in February, reversed the burden of proof in evictions to put responsibility on the shoulders of owners.
“The older we are, the more we are at risk”
Wednesday morning, former solidarity MP Françoise David – who passed a law to protect senior tenants in 2016 – published a letter in The Press to ask the government to quickly adopt the solidarity legislative piece, while “Quebec is going through the worst housing crisis in the last 40 years”.
“We are now asking the government and the opposition parties to rediscover the transpartisan spirit of 2016 and to work together towards the rapid and unanimous adoption of a law further protecting senior tenants from eviction,” he said. we read in the missive.
The letter is signed by two former PQ ministers, Louise Harel and Marie Malavoy, as well as former Liberal MP Christiane Pelchat.
Little appetite by Simon Jolin-Barrette
On Tuesday, the leader of the government, Simon Jolin-Barrette, also did not show much appetite for the solidarity bill to be adopted, even if he accepted that it would be called.
He indicated that the debate on the protection of elderly tenants had already been made within the framework of Bill 31 on housing and that the government’s position had not changed.
During the study of Bill 31, QS and the Parti Québécois (PQ) tabled amendments to improve the Françoise David law. The Minister of Housing, France-Élaine Duranceau, refused them, arguing that her bill already contained several measures to protect people from evictions, regardless of their age.
Gag and negotiations
We learned on Tuesday that the call for the solidarity bill had been the subject of behind-the-scenes negotiations between Simon Jolin-Barrette and QS leader Alexandre Leduc.
QS committed to speeding up the adoption by gag order of Bill 15 on the health system and in exchange, the government was going to call Bill 198, explained Mr. Leduc.
The solidarity leader also affirmed that he hoped to convince his CAQ opponents to adopt his bill. The Liberals and the PQ have already spoken out in favor.
The Françoise David law stipulates that a senior over 70 with a very low income who has lived in their home for more than 10 years cannot be evicted. The objective of the new solidarity bill is to broaden the criteria in order to include in particular people aged 65 and over who have lived in their home for at least five years.