Quebec Opposition unconvinced province will impose penalty on unvaccinated
MONTREAL — Quebec’s announcement that it would tax unvaccinated residents sparked strong reaction and pushed Canadian premiers to take a position on it, but the province’s official Opposition says it’s unconvinced the government will go ahead with its threat.
Describing Quebec Premier François Legault’s plan as a “trial balloon,” Liberal health critic Monsef Derraji said Wednesday he thinks the idea will be abandoned the way the province dropped its plan to force health-care workers to get the jab or be suspended without pay.
“It will take four weeks, six weeks and they will say, ‘Listen guys, I tried to do my best to push people to take the vaccine and it’s not realistic and we should forget this idea because it’s bad,'” Derraji said in an interview.
On Tuesday, Legault said he planned to make the unvaccinated pay a “significant” financial penalty. The unvaccinated, Legault added, occupy a disproportionate number of hospital beds and should be required to pay an additional contribution to the health-care system.

