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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on Canada’s premiers to match his pledge to remove the federal sales tax on new homes under $1 million by doing the same with provincial sales taxes.
“This is a significant step in fixing what has been broken and making home ownership more than just a dream for young Canadians again,” Poilievre said in a letter to all provincial and territorial premiers, which was shared with CBC News.
“But there’s more that can be done, and you can help.”
Poilievre sent the letter on Sunday. It came one week after he promised
The Conservatives say the move would save Canadians $40,000 on a $800,000 house and would drive the construction of an additional 30,000 homes in Canada every year. The announcement was praised by the CEO of the Canadian Home Builders’ Association.
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In his letter to premiers, Poilievre asked them to match his proposal “by axing the provincial sales tax (where applicable) on new homes under $1 million.”
Alberta and the territories do not have a provincial sales tax. Provincial sales tax rates range from six per cent in Saskatchewan to 10 per cent in the Atlantic provinces. British Columbia doesn’t charge provincial tax on new homes.
Days before he called an election, Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston, who leads the Progressive Conservatives, promised to lower the harmonized sales tax to 14 per cent next year
Other provinces, including New Brunswick, Saskatchewan and British Columbia, held elections this fall. Ontario could be heading to an election in the spring.
The cost of housing has been an issue across the country; experts have blamed a surging population, higher interest rates and insufficient housing supply for the shortage of affordable housing. Canadian house prices have increased by an average of more than 30 per cent since April 2020.
“I understand that all provinces are different. But if you match my announcement with a provincial sales tax cut of your own on new homes, you will save your residents tens of thousands of dollars,” Poilievre wrote in the letter.
Premiers brush off the idea
In Nova Scotia, where an election campaign is underway, Houston has promised to create a new financing option for first-time buyers but has been non-committal about lifting provincial tax from new builds.
“I’m interested in lower taxes,” Houston said Monday, pointing to his plans to lower income taxes and the HST. “I’ll talk to anyone about any ideas they have on lower taxes and more housing, I’m happy to have a discussion about that. It’s not something I can commit to today.”
When asked about Poilievre’s tax cut proposal, a spokesperson for Quebec Premier François Legault referred back to comments made by the province’s finance minister, Éric Girard, last week.
Girard said he looked at the proposal and concluded that it would not be “a particularly effective measure.”
Girard told reporters on Thursday that it would not change the amount of money contractors need to pay to get new homes built, so it would not encourage them to build more homes.
In media statements, officials in Ontario and Saskatchewan also declined to commit to fully removing provincial sales taxes from new home builds.
Both provinces already have programs that offer partial rebates on the provincial portion of the sales tax for new homes.
“Any changes to taxation would have to be considered as part of the budgetary process,” said Julie Leggott, press secretary to Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, in a media statement.
Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre announced a plan to remove the GST from new-construction homes under $1 million, if his party forms government.
Cutting the tax would come with significant costs.
Poilievre has said he would cover the cost of cutting the GST — which he estimates at about $8 billion annually — by cutting federal programs he calls bureaucratic, including the Housing Accelerator Fund.
Housing minister fires back
Last week, Housing Minister Sean Fraser responded to Poilievre’s barbs during question period by revealing that some members of the Conservative caucus have called for their communities to receive funding from the same programs Poilievre has vowed to cut.
The House Accelerator Fund gives money to towns and cities that commit to reducing red tape to build more homes. To date, 177 deals have been struck between municipalities and the federal government.
Poilievre has called the program “disastrous” and bureaucratic and has claimed it hasn’t yet led to more homes being built.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Housing Minister Sean Fraser had an increasingly heated exchange in question period Tuesday, which started with Poilievre asking about his own promise to remove the GST on new homes sold for less than $1 million. The two men went on to call each other arrogant and incompetent.
“What [Poilievre] doesn’t know is his caucus colleagues have been going behind his back, writing me letters advocating for their communities to receive funding through the Housing Accelerator Fund because they believe it will get more homes built,” Fraser said.
“My question for the Conservative members of his caucus, will they have the courage to stand up and tell him he is wrong?”
Fraser’s office provided letters to CBC News from Conservative MPs Adam Chambers, Rob Moore, Michael Cooper, Dan Albas and Lianne Rood. The letters, which ask Fraser to grant their communities funding from the Housing Accelerator Fund, were sent to the minister between September 2023 and February 2024.
Source: cbc