More than other premiers, Manitoba's Heather Stefanson needs a health-care deal with Ottawa - Action News
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ManitobaAnalysis

More than other premiers, Manitoba's Heather Stefanson needs a health-care deal with Ottawa

The stakes are very high for Manitoba's Heather Stefanson as premiers hash out health-care funding with the prime minister. Only she and Alberta's Danielle Smith are heading into elections this year.

Substantially more money for health could offer voters hope as province heads toward fall election

Manitoba's premier, dressed in black and wearing aviator-style glasses, standing at a microphine. A row of provincial flags is behind her.
On Monday, Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said premiers have not seen details of Ottawa's health-care funding proposal in advance of Tuesday's first ministers' meeting. (CBC News)

Ifpolitics is theatre, then Manitoba Premier Heather Stefansonappearscomfortable in the role she's playing in the latest round of health-care talks.

Stefanson is in Ottawa, where Canada's premiers and territorial leaders are slated to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau about a new health-care funding deal Tuesday.

On Monday,CBC News and most othermedia outlets in Canada reported aspects of the10-year deal he'sexpected to place on the table.

Several hours later, whenStefanson addressed reporters in her role as the head of the Council of the Federation, which includes the premiers and territorial leaders,Manitoba's premiersaid she knew nothing of the contents of the deal and lamented she was not provided with a head'sup.

"I would have liked to have seen the proposal ahead of time. There's no question," Stefansontold reporters at a news briefing.

"If we had had it ahead of time, we could have had a more fulsome discussion."

The deal is supposed to includemore cash added topreviously announced increases to the Canada Health Transfer, as well as additional cash injections into the specific funding deals Ottawa has with each province and territory. The new money would flow as soon as the federal budget passes.

Stefanson, however, said there isno expectationa deal will be reached between her colleagues and the prime minister on Tuesday.

Playing it cool is a good tacticfor any negotiator, but let's be clear: Manitoba, home to less than four per cent of Canada's population, will not make or break this particular deal, assuming it is the result of a negotiation and not a fundingpackage presented as a fait accompli by the prime minister.

The stakes, however, are very high for this premierin particular. Only she and Alberta's Danielle Smith are heading into elections this year.

Election stakes

Some form of positive health-care news is utterly crucial for Stefanson and her Progressive Conservative government, which has been trailing badly behind Manitoba's oppositionNDP in every recent poll.

"The premier really hasto make a move on health care to get more money secured forManitoba," said Chris Adams, anadjunct professor in political studies at the University of Manitoba.

"Now of course we're a smaller player in Canada when you compare us to the other provinces. But I would say thatstriking a deal with the federal government getting increased funding iscritically important."

There may besome history weighing on Stefanson. Ahealth-care crisis was a big factor in knocking off the last PC government in Manitoba, Adams noted.

"The health-care system can make or break a government, and one has to look at the 1999 provincial election, in which [former PC premier] Gary Filmon lost power," Adams said.

"One of the biggest issues was hallway medicine at a time when the federal government was doing cutbacks to social spending across Canada."

Hallway medicine helped usher Gary Filmon out of the premier's office in 1999. (Justin Fraser/CBC)

The Filmon government had to contendwith Jean Chretien's federal government, which took scissors to the federal budget in an effort to tame a massive federal deficit after the Liberals took power in 1993.

The Trudeau Liberals are an entirely different fiscal creature. This government has shown little reluctance in spending and is under a similar form of pressure to devote dollars to health care.

An Angus-Reid poll published on Monday suggested two-thirds of Canadians don't like the quality of the care they're receiving.

The poll suggested 68 per cent of those surveyed consider health care to be poor or very poor. As well, 45 per cent of respondentsblame both the federal and provincial governments for this mess, according to the poll.

Angus Reid conducted arandomized survey of1,726 members of the firm's proprietary sampleover the first three days of February. Had the firm utilized a purely random sample, the poll would have a margin of error of 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

A woman in a beige coat holding a large red hart in front of a sign reading Ontario Health Coalition speaks into a microphone
An Ontario Health Coalition demonstration in Toronto in December. Two thirds of Canadians are not pleased with the health care they're receiving, according to a recent Angus Reid poll. (Linda Ward/CBC)

Even if Canada's leaders work out a health-care deal, the money may not flow to Manitoba quickly enough to make a difference in health outcomes prior to the Oct. 3 provincial election.

But there is no political downside to offering hope. And Stefanson is not hurting herself in her current rolein Ottawa, where she's serving asthe face of Canada's provinces and territories.

"It's like when we see a prime ministerinternationally doing things on a stage," Adams said. "It gives her stature. People see her assomeone that people are listening to across Canada.

"So I would say it can do nothing but help her."