The Liberal government will need the co-operation of at least one other party to pass its budget — and the opposition benches are starting to signal what they want to see when the federal financial plan is released on Nov. 4.
Conservative employment critic Garnett Genuis made a policy pitch Wednesday morning, outlining a plan to boost job prospects for young workers who are facing a 15-year high unemployment rate, excluding the pandemic years.
“I don’t think the government in general is adequately addressing this issue … but we’re here in a constructive spirit to put forward our ideas and encourage the government to include these in their budget,” Genuis told reporters in Ottawa.
Genuis’s plan would see government student assistance programs — like the Canada Student Financial As
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