Scheer promises to clear backlog of veterans waiting to receive benefits
CANOE COVE, P.E.I. — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer asked Canada’s embittered military veterans to welcome his party back into their hearts Sunday after a tumultuous 13 years of what many former soldiers consider betrayals by both the Harper and Trudeau governments.
As prime minister, Scheer said, he would personally preside over a Conservative plan to clear a growing backlog of applications for benefits within two years and also establish a fair and reliable pension system — two long-standing irritants between the two governing parties and the veterans community, long considered a core constituency for the Tories.
“To every veteran who has struggled and who has continued to struggle without the support and benefits you have earned through your service, my message is this: You have been betrayed, but you deserve better,” Scheer said.
Robert Gould, who served in the armoured corps for 25 years, spoke with Scheer after the announcement and said his fellow service men and women are frustrated that they’ve been used as political pawns. He told Scheer that he feels as though both Liberals and Conservatives hate veterans.