“Justinflation” judged verboten in the House of Commons


OTTAWA-

The Conservatives’ cheeky term for inflation under the Liberals got some MPs in the House of Commons in trouble, where saying “justinflation” was seen as verboten.

Speaker Anthony Rota repeatedly chastised Tory MPs this week for breaking the rules, asking them to ‘correct the mistake’ as their ‘pun intended’ indirectly violated procedure.

The House of Commons has long dictated that MPs must use each other’s titles during debate, but never their first names – so anything that deliberately includes “Justin”, the prime minister’s first name, is excluded.

The Tories have not yet been deterred, however, with the daily transcript of Commons debates recording their use of the term more than a hundred times since last November.

It was then that Pierre Poilievre, then finance critic and now Conservative leader, began to popularize the term.

Some MPs appeared to respond to Rota’s warnings by adding an exaggerated pause between the two words on Wednesday – just in case.

The Liberals rose to complain about the term as early as March, and again this week after Tory MP Garnett Genuis said “justinflation” three times in a speech.

Liberal MP Kevin Lamoureux said he had been “somewhat patient with the MP” but three times was enough to say Genuis was intentionally using the term “unparliamentary” and “inappropriate” to flout the rules.

Longtime NDP MP Charlie Angus chimed in, complaining that Genuis uses the term all the time. “It’s a bit lame and I don’t think it’s appropriate. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it think. The Speaker should ask the member to withdraw his lame comment.”

Assistant Deputy Speaker Carol Hughes said: ‘I know the MP puts it into his speech a little differently, but again I want to caution him about the use of that word.’

The Conservatives, who have worked it into their speeches a little differently on a myriad of occasions, aren’t the only ones making the joke.

NDP MP Niki Ashton, in a statement to the House last week, alluded to it, saying that while Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Poilievre have little in common, they’re both “just in bed with their company buddies”.

Trudeau himself has only uttered “fair inflation” once in the House, when he tried to turn the tables on the Conservatives last December.

“They talk to Canadians about the problems they face with decreasing affordability, increasing prices for everything, difficulty buying gas, difficulty buying computers, and they shrug their shoulders and say “Oh, it’s just inflation,” he said.

“Well, it’s not just inflation; it’s the goal we have to have to keep investing in Canadians.”

He never said it again.


This report from The Canadian Press was first published on September 30, 2022.