Canadian Health Coalition
  • Donate

    The form is not published.

  • Menu Canvas
    • Home
    • About Us
      • Our Team
    • News
    • Campaigns
    • Take action
    • Ways to Give
      • Give one-time
      • Become a monthly donor
      • Leave a gift in your will
      • Make a tribute donation
    • Contact
    • Donate
  • English
  • Français (French)
  • hello@healthcoalition.ca
  • 343-558-1788
Donate | Subscribe
    • English
    • Français (French)
Canadian Health Coalition
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our Team
  • News
  • Campaigns
  • Take action
  • Ways to Give
    • Give one-time
    • Become a monthly donor
    • Leave a gift in your will
    • Make a tribute donation
  • Contact
  • Donate

Will Carney commit to future pharmacare deals with willing provinces and territories?

Homepage Commentary Will Carney commit to future pharmacare deals with willing provinces and territories?
Commentary

Will Carney commit to future pharmacare deals with willing provinces and territories?

April 1, 2025
By Steven Staples
0 Comment
2680 Views

Answering a reporter’s question today asking whether he would expand pharmacare to include new classes of prescription medicine beyond contraceptives and diabetes treatments, Prime Minister Mark Carney said he is, “committed to keeping what is in place.” 

Responding to Carney, NDP leader Jagmeet Singh said that his party would expand pharmacare to include more prescription medications. “Mark Carney refused to commit to expanding pharmacare at the same time he is promising a $17 billion tax cut that only helps millionaires and billionaires,” he said in a statement. “That’s wrong.”

Former Health Minister Mark Holland signed pharmacare agreements with four jurisdictions: Manitoba, British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, and Yukon. 

The Canadian Health Coalition is asking Liberal leader Mark Carney to clarify whether he will commit to expanding the current program by negotiating pharmacare agreements with additional willing provinces and territories, if his party should form the next government. 

On March 22, the day before the general election was called, Health Minister Kamal Khera told the Hill Times that a re-elected Liberal government would work to get on board the nine provinces and territories that have not signed pharmacare bilateral agreements. 

“Millions of Canadians, many of whom are struggling financially, are waiting to be included in this historic expansion of public health care,” said Steven Staples, National Director of Policy and Advocacy for the Canadian Health Coalition. “We cannot risk creating an unfair patchwork where some Canadians benefit from publicly-funded prescription medications, and others are forced to bear the expense on their own.” 

Canada’s national universal pharmacare program, supported by the Liberals and the NDP, was enacted by Bill C-64 in October, and was funded through Budget 2024 with $1.5 billion over five years, starting in 2024-25. The program was welcomed by a wide array of organizations, including members of the Canadian Health Coalition. 

Stay in the loop—subscribe to our newsletter and follow us on social media for the latest updates on public health care in Canada

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Bluesky
  • X
  • LinkedIn

    Steven Staples is the National Director of Policy and Advocacy for the Canadian Health Coalition

    This article was updated on April 2, 2025 to include the NDP’s response

    Tags: Pharmacare

    Previous Story
    Health Coalition urges electors to “Vote Health Care” in Election 2025
    Next Story
    Webinar: Trump’s trade war and what it means for public health care in Canada with Jim Stanford and Angella MacEwen

    Related Articles

    Our 2026 Parliament Hill Lobby recap

    Three days in Ottawa fighting for public health care

    Expert committee calls for expansion of national universal pharmacare

    The Canadian Health Coalition welcomes the Final Report of the...

    Recent Posts

    • Webinar: Health Canada on Alberta’s two-tier health care law and how provinces/territories are doing on delivering public health care Jun 8, 2026
    • Webinar: Why the Canadian Dental Care Plan needs to expand May 28, 2026
    • Another year of fighting for universal public health care May 25, 2026
    • Tell Minister Michel: Enforce the Canada Health Act and stop Bill 11 May 21, 2026
    • Labour movement demands Prime Minister and Health Minister stop Alberta’s two-tier health care law May 14, 2026

    Tags

    Bill 11 Canada Health Act Canada Health Transfer Canadian Health Coalition COVID-19 Dental Care Federal Election 44 Federal Election 45 Health+Hope 2025 Health Care Workers Health equity Health Policy Home care Long-term Care Medicare Mental Health Pharmacare Plasma Privatization Racism Reproductive Health Care Sexual and reproductive health and rights Solutions series Substance use care Toxic drug crisis

    [custom-twitter-feeds showbutton=false creditctf=false]

    Canadian Health Coalition
    2841 Riverside Dr.
    Ottawa, Ontario K1V 8X7
    +343.558.1788
    hello@healthcoalition.ca
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Campaigns
    • News
    • Contact
    SearchPostsLogin
    Monday, 8, Jun
    Webinar: Health Canada on Alberta’s two-tier health care law and how provinces/territories are doing on delivering public health care
    Thursday, 28, May
    Webinar: Why the Canadian Dental Care Plan needs to expand
    Monday, 25, May
    Another year of fighting for universal public health care
    Thursday, 21, May
    Tell Minister Michel: Enforce the Canada Health Act and stop Bill 11
    Thursday, 14, May
    Labour movement demands Prime Minister and Health Minister stop Alberta’s two-tier health care law
    Wednesday, 13, May
    Against Racism, For Health Equity: A Research Roundtable

    Welcome back,