House of Commons passed some key bills before breaking for the summer - Action News
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House of Commons passed some key bills before breaking for the summer

After a flurry of activity late into the evening Wednesday, MPs cleared the legislative decks and passed some key government bills before a three-month summer recess.

MPs pass budget bill, legislation to make tech giants pay for news Senate expected to sit on firearms bill

A House of Commons clerk is seen in the House of Commons chamber.
A House of Commons clerk is seen in the House of Commons chamber. After a flurry of activity late into the evening Wednesday, MPs cleared the legislative decks and passed some key government bills before a three-month summer recess. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

After a flurry of activity late into the evening Wednesday, MPs cleared the legislative decks and passed some key government bills before a three-month summer recess.

Liberal Government House Leader Mark Holland got much of what he wanted passed through the House of Commons at third reading or pushed off to committee for further study in the fall.

The oppositionConservatives have tried to stall some bills but the government, with the support of the NDP, introduced a parliamentary manoeuvre called "time allocation" on several occasions to shut down debate and move bills to votes.

"Despite the noise often that's in Parliament, Canadians can look at what their Parliament and government achieved and see enormous progress," Holland told reporters.

Government House Leader Mark Holland makes his way to a microphone to speak with reporters in the Foyer of the House of Commons.
Government House Leader Mark Holland makes his way to a microphone to speak with reporters in the Foyer of the House of Commons. Holland got much of what he wanted either passed through the House of Commons at third reading or pushed off to committee for further study in the fall. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Beyond the legislative agenda, this sitting saw some bitter and very personal verbal brawls erupt in the Commons.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has hammered the government over its handling of Chinese meddling in Canada's elections. At one point he accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of working on behalf of Beijing. He's also attackedthe government's management of a shaky economy during a time of high inflation.

Trudeau, meanwhile, has accused the Tories of being climate change deniers as wildfires rage.

The prime minister said Poilievre would implement deep cuts to public services and he blasted Tories for allegedly slandering former governor general David Johnston, the embattled former special rapporteur on foreign interference.

In a rare moment of levity in a fractious Commons, Conservative MPGarnett Genuisrose after shortly midnight to recite a humorous poem.

"It seems our debates just get dumber and dumber so let's get lostand go home and have a good summer," he said.

Before rising, the Commons dispensed with two government bills that have been targetsof entrenched Conservative opposition: C-47, the budget bill, and C-18, legislation that forces tech giants like Facebook and Google to pay news outlets for posting their journalism on their platforms.

The Senate itself passed C-18 shortly after 2 p.m. Thursday.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, issued a statement saying it will soonend access to Canadian news on their platforms now that the bill is law.

Google has said it's considering a similarapproach.

The Senate hadamended C-18 making changes meant to quell opposition from social media companies that say the regime that requires payment for posting links is unfair.

A man wearing glasses is shown in a shirt and tie.
Conservative Senate Leader Don Plett slammed the government's firearms legislation, C-21. (Chris Rands/CBC)

Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguezhas said these two companies, which control the vast majority of digital advertising in Canada and elsewhere, are threatening the viability of news companies.

He accepted 10 of the Senate's 12 amendments rejecting two that he said would have materially changed the legislation's intent.

The Red Chamber decided to roll over rather than insist on its amendments.

Thebudget bill is also expected to pass tonight, saida spokesperson for the government's representative in the Red ChamberSen. Marc Gold.

BillC-35, which entrenches the government's national child-care program into law, was passed by MPs but isn't expected tomove through the Senate until Parliament resumes in late September.

The government's newCanada Disability Benefit, whichcreates a federal income supplement for low-income,working-age people with disabilities, will soon receive royal assent afterclearing both chambers this week.

The upper house likely will rise for its own summer vacation after it passes C-51 which will implement a self-government treaty with Saskatchewan's Whitecap Dakota Nation and two "supply bills" that give the parliamentary stamp of approval on new government spending, Gold'sspokesperson said.

What's not expected to pass Thursday is Bill C-21, the government's controversial firearms legislation. The bill would implementa national handgun ban and redefineprohibited firearms as part of a push to ban "assault-style" rifles.

In a lengthy speech Wednesday, Conservative Senate Leader Don Plett slammed what he called a "badly thought-out bill" that will have "very negative implications" for Canada's gun owners while doing little to suppress violence. The government has said weapons of war have no place in the hands of civilians.

Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez rises during question period
Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez rejected two of the Senate's proposed amendments to C-18. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Despite some Conservative opposition, the bill was sent off to committee for further study by an overwhelming vote of 52 to 18 in a Senate chamber now dominated by Liberal appointees. The fight will resume in the fall.

Poilievre threatenedto filibuster the budget bill and he did speak at length on the bill recently but it appears C-47 willcross the finish line unscathed.

Like budget bills before it, the legislation has been criticized as an "omnibus" bill because so many non-financial matterslike a vague promise to demand parties respect privacy rights and changes to the Criminal Code have been jammed into it.

The government has defended omnibus billsas a way to quickly move election promises through Parliament.

Critics say they are undemocratic because they treatMPs and senators like rubber stamps, giving them less of an opportunity to probe certain programs.

The budget bill, when passed, will launch major government initiatives like multi-billion-dollar tax credits to stimulate the clean energy sector and clean tech manufacturing.

It'll also launch a $13-billion expansion of a national dental care program, offering government-funded dentistry to families earning less than $90,000 a year.

Last week, Richard Wagner, the chief justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, implored Parliament to finally pass C-9, changes to the Judges Act that would overhaul the regime for investigating judges accused of wrongdoing.

The legislation has been before Parliament in some form for years.

The bill, once passed, will create a new process for the Canadian Judicial Council to review misconduct allegations that are not serious enough to warrant a judge's removal.

Wagner said the delays threaten public confidence in how the government and the judiciary probe wayward judges.

The Senate amended the bill to changehow complaints can be dismissed, who sits on the panel deciding how discipline should be dealt with and how decisions can be appealed.

Justice Minister David Lametti rejected the more substantive changes, which prompted Conservative Sen. Denise Batters to complain that the government doesn't really want "sober second thought" from the Senate.

Batters had proposed including laypersons at every stage of the disciplinary process and reinstating a role for the Federal Court of Appeal.

"The Trudeau government is rejecting both common sense and the evidence. It's clear they see the Senate as nothing but a glorified rubber stamp," she said.

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