Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parliament resumes sitting today, government expected to try to focus on the economy and job creatio

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 15 Sep, 2014 11:02 AM

    OTTAWA - Like kids going to their first day at school, MPs will be donning their best suits and lugging freshly-filled briefcases back to work today on Parliament Hill for their last fall sitting before the next general election.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper will make a show of it, rallying supporters and colleagues a few blocks away from the seat of power in a campaign-style event.

    Harper will outline his government's fall agenda at a speech this morning (10:45 a.m. ET) at an Ottawa convention hall.

    Expect the prime minister to focus heavily on the economy and job creation.

    The New Democrats will spend the lunch hour spelling out how they'll be opposing the Tories, at a news conference in the Charles Lynch Press Theatre.

    Here are some of the other comings and goings expected in Ottawa and around today:

    — Liberal MP Marc Garneau will ask for an emergency debate in the House of Commons on the decision to deploy members of the Canadian Armed Forces to Iraq;

    — The CRTC will begin a second week of hearings in Gatineau, Que., into how Canada's television industry can keep up with technological change, with a focus on how Canadians receive TV signals, and how they pay for them. Witnesses appearing today include the Walt Disney Company and Numeris;

    — Industry Minister James Moore will speak at The School of Public Policy's international trade experts annual symposium;

    — And climate change activist Joseph Boutilier, who rode a unicycle 5,000-kilometers across Canada to promote action to prevent global warming, will hold a news conference along with several members of Parliament.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Edmonton-area teen escapes cougar in Waterton Lakes National Park

    Edmonton-area teen escapes cougar in Waterton Lakes National Park
    An Edmonton-area teenager says her close call with a cougar in Waterton Lakes National Park won't stop her from hiking in the future.

    Edmonton-area teen escapes cougar in Waterton Lakes National Park

    Conservatives tout traditional family values in message to party members

    Conservatives tout traditional family values in message to party members
    The federal Conservatives are telling core supporters that "traditional family values" are a party stance, a phrase that so far has not entered the prime minister's public speeches or official Tory documents.

    Conservatives tout traditional family values in message to party members

    Heart study subjects not representative of cardiac patients as a whole

    Heart study subjects not representative of cardiac patients as a whole
    A new study points out a serious problem that plagues research into treatments for heart disease.

    Heart study subjects not representative of cardiac patients as a whole

    Growing support for inquiry, premiers, native leaders say ahead of meeting

    Growing support for inquiry, premiers, native leaders say ahead of meeting
    The federal government is rejecting renewed calls for a public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women in advance of a meeting Wednesday between premiers and native leaders, one of whom says the prime minister is isolated in his position.

    Growing support for inquiry, premiers, native leaders say ahead of meeting

    Arctic rangers want better equipment to deal with climate change

    Arctic rangers want better equipment to deal with climate change
    A new report says global warming has so altered the Arctic that the Canadian Rangers — largely aboriginal reservists who patrol the North — need new equipment to navigate a vast terrain they barely recognize anymore.

    Arctic rangers want better equipment to deal with climate change

    Inquiry would delay action on missing, murdered aboriginal women: police chiefs

    Inquiry would delay action on missing, murdered aboriginal women: police chiefs
    The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police has decided against endorsing a public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Inquiry would delay action on missing, murdered aboriginal women: police chiefs