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Harper Backs MPs Depiction of Liberal Day Care
Plan as "Soviet Style" From: LifeSiteNews
<lsn@lifesitenews.com Subject: LifeSiteNews.com
- Wednesday April 12, 2006
By John-Henry Westen
OTTAWA, April 12, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Liberal
MP Omar Alghabra (Mississauga-Erindale) was incensed
in the House of Commons yesterday that Conservative
MP Cheryl Gallant had compared the Liberal day care
plan to "Soviet style" day care. "Mr.
Speaker, yesterday the Conservative member for Renfrew-Nipissing-Pembroke
said that the Quebec model of child care, adopted by
the former government, was a soviet style child care,"
protested Alghabra. He demanded Prime Minister Harper
apologize for the remarks.
Gallant on April 10, said in the Commons, "It
has been recognized, even by the defeated Liberals,
that the problem of allocating billions and billions
of dollars for a day care program with no control on
how that money is eventually spent is the greatest weakness
in the top down approach to government programs. . .
The drive to provide Soviet style institutionalized
day care is being pushed from the top down, not the
other way around that has been suggested by the opponents
of giving parents choice in child care."
Gallant added, "for the previous 13 years, Canadians
ha(ve) been saddled with an interventionist government
that without a doubt has been anti-family. The worldwide
trend away from Soviet style institutionalized day care
has been very pronounced in those countries that were
formerly part of the old Soviet empire and are now democracies.
Our plan to provide benefits directly to families is
in tune with the experience of other democratic countries."
The Renfrew Nippissing Pembroke MP is backed up by
authors on the subject.
Peter Shawn Taylor, writing in the Fall/Winter IMFC
Review, 'Comparing Canada's family policy to other nations',
compared Canada's Liberal day care plan to that of Hungary.
"During communist rule (1949-1990), the predominant
feature of the national family policy was factory-provided
daycare," wrote Taylor. "During these years,
childcare was seen as a means to boost the female labour
supply and increase economic production. In 1980, there
were nearly 70,000 Hungarian enrolled in formal daycare.
Since the collapse of the Soviet Empire, child care
usage has fallen dramatically in Hungary due in part
to greater preference for at-home care. In 2000, the
number of children in formal child care stood at 30,000."
In response to the Liberal demand for an apology,
Prime Minister Stephen Harper replied, "I would
observe that after 13 years in office over there the
Liberals had not created any child care spaces. They
had not given any money to parents. I would say their
plan did crumble, just like the old Soviet Union."
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