Suffering in our own backyard
Harper wants to help women and children in the developing world. So why not here at home, too?
Jack Layton, National Post Stephen Harper's recent announcement that Canada will be making maternal and child health a top priority at makes him a welcome latecomer to the issue. While other countries have been delivering full-fledged support for maternal and child health since 2007, pledging $5.3-billion dollars to the cause last year alone, Canada has been virtually invisible on the issue. Rather than marking a new approach of principled humanitarianism, this announcement highlights years of Canadian inaction on the health of women and children under Mr. Harper's watch.
Mr. Harper acknowledges that the solutions to maternal and child health problems are "not intrinsically expensive." This holds true for Canadian women and children as well: Providing safe drinking water on reserves, addressing the affordable housing crisis, and funding organizations that support women and children are all relatively inexpensive compared to the health and social costs of poverty in Canada, which are estimated at more than $20-billion per year.
To put the full consequences of this indifference into perspective, imagine a city the size of Winnipeg full of children: That is the number of our kids who live in poverty in Canada today.
As a country, we have the ability to take decisive action to end this cycle of marginalization, and Mr. Harper has shown that he knows that investing in women and children will get the job done in the developing world. It will be pure hypocrisy if he refuses to make similar investments here at home.
The upcoming budget will be an affront to women and children living in poverty. It includes no improved child benefit, no spending on childcare, no plan for affordable housing, no funding to tackle violence against women and no expanded access to EI for non-traditional workers. Mr. Harper's pronouncements that his next budget will be an exercise in belt-tightening suggest that the most excluded will be put last as families across the country struggle to stay afloat during these difficult economic times.
While this new commitment to make maternal and child health a top priority is a welcome change from Mr. Harper's usual stance, it is simply not enough make it on the international stage alone.
Canada's most marginalized deserve, and demand, more.
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