Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

House of Commons breaks for summer today

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2021 09:58 AM
  • House of Commons breaks for summer today

The House of Commons is poised to break today for the summer — and possibly for an election — after giving eleventh-hour approval to what the minority Liberal government considers its priority legislation.

But it's far from certain the Senate will be as accommodating.

Three priority bills have landed in the Senate over the past couple of days and a fourth is expected to arrive later today in the upper house, where some senators are balking at the prospect of rushing them through at lightning speed.

The Senate is scheduled to wrap up today as well and it would take unanimous consent to extend the sitting in its current hybrid format, adopted to allow for virtual participation during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Senate committees have already conducted pre-studies of two of the four bills — C-30, the budget implementation bill, and C-12, which would set targets for achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050 — so they're likely to make it to a final vote.

But two others — C-6, a bill to ban conversion therapy aimed at altering a person's sexual orientation or gender identity, and C-10, a controversial bill to regulate online streaming giants — would require unanimous consent to fast-track through the Senate, without study by a committee.

Sen. Scott Tannas, leader of the Canadian Senators Group, warned the Senate on Tuesday that his 12-member caucus won't be stampeded into forgoing their duty to give legislation sober second thought.

He recounted an old saying: "Your bad planning is not my emergency."

On behalf of his group, Tannas added, "In the coming days, we will carefully and thoughtfully be applying that principle."

Discussions about extending the Senate sitting were continuing among the leaders of the various Senate groups late Tuesday. But even if they agree to do so, it's not clear they'll sit long enough to wrap up all four priority bills.

Any bill that is not passed by the Senate will die if, as many suspect, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau calls an election this summer.

The Liberals have been scrambling to get the four priority bills through the Commons in the face of Conservative delay tactics.

With the help of the Bloc Québécois and the NDP, the government won final approval of C-10 in the Commons late Monday night and C-6 on Tuesday. They passed C-12 just after midnight today.

The budget bill is to be put to a final vote this afternoon before being sent along to the Senate.

The government has given up on a number of other bills it once considered a priority, including C-19 which would have given the chief electoral officer temporary new powers meant to ensure an election could be conducted safely during the pandemic.

If Trudeau does call an election this summer or fall, it will be without those safeguards.

On Wednesday, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole sought to paint a stark line between his party and the others, daubing them all with "four shades of red" in a campaign-style speech to kick off the morning.

"The Liberals, NDP, Greens and Bloc Québécois give the illusion of choice and debate, but there’s no such thing," he told caucus members gathered in a building across from Parliament's West Block.

O'Toole accused the other opposition parties of trying to "outcompete" each other in spending and threw a populist punch against a "comfortable circle of Liberal insiders," who he suggested want to "cancel Canada Day."

Other legislation still stuck in the Commons legislative process include bills to strengthen privacy protections, tighten firearms restrictions, reform the criminal justice system, overhaul the Official Languages Act and introduce a new disability benefit.

The disability benefit bill was tabled Tuesday, with zero chance of making any progress before the House rises. Such last minute initiatives have fuelled suspicions that Trudeau intends to pull the plug on his government and hold up the unfinished business as examples of the kinds of things Liberals could accomplish if they had a majority.

Throughout the winter and spring sitting, the government did manage to attain royal assent for a dozen pieces of legislation, including bills to expand access to medical assistance in dying, require sexual assault training for judges, implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, create a national day of Truth and Reconciliation and amend the citizenship oath to include a recognition of Indigenous rights.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Tories demand Trudeau fire defence minister

Tories demand Trudeau fire defence minister
The federal Conservatives are demanding Prime Minister Justin Trudeau fire Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan following what they describe as years of mismanagement and coverups.

Tories demand Trudeau fire defence minister

Western premiers seek answers on border rules

Western premiers seek answers on border rules
Trudeau has called premiers to a meeting Thursday to discuss reopening borders amid concerns Canada is lagging behind other nations on resuming travel.

Western premiers seek answers on border rules

Tourism, restaurant sectors face restart hurdles

Tourism, restaurant sectors face restart hurdles
Industry representatives say the closed border between Canada and the United States and worker shortages will continue to hinder their restart despite fewer health restrictions.

Tourism, restaurant sectors face restart hurdles

108 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

108 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
76.1% of all adults in B.C. and 74.4% of those 12 and older have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. In total, 4,102,905 doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., 657,491 of which are second doses.

108 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

B.C. lends support to temporary patios going permanent

B.C. lends support to temporary patios going permanent
More than 2,000 temporary patios authorized to serve liquor during the COVID-19 pandemic can apply to become permanent under amended provincial liquor regulations.

B.C. lends support to temporary patios going permanent

Canada in WTO talks on waiving vaccine patents

Canada in WTO talks on waiving vaccine patents
Speaking in Brussels following a Canada-EU with European leaders, Trudeau says the issue of COVID-19 vaccine patents is complex, but the global goal is to get everyone around the world safely vaccinated as quickly as possible.    

Canada in WTO talks on waiving vaccine patents