Pharmacare Bill C-64 Is Law

The Senate last evening on a voice vote passed cabinet’s pharmacare bill into law. Advocates called it short of its promise but a necessary first step to public prescription drug insurance: “This is not universality. But it is the first step towards universality.”

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MP Fears A ‘Kangaroo Court’

Parliament must “clear the air” over allegations of foreign spies on Parliament Hill, former public safety minister Marco Mendicino yesterday testified at the Commission on Foreign Interference. Mendicino complained a damning report by a Liberal-dominated committee could turn Parliament into a “kangaroo court.”

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Lib Staffer Denies Obstruction

Lawyers at the China inquiry last night suggested a cabinet aide tried to obstruct an investigation of Liberal Party contacts with the Chinese Consulate in Toronto. Zita Astravas, former chief of staff to Defence Minister Bill Blair, could not explain why she shelved a warrant application for weeks despite requests by the Department of Public Safety and Canadian Security Intelligence Service: “You saw it was deeply concerned with the operations of your Party.”

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No Traitors Here, Vows Aide

No parliamentarians have committed treason though some MPs have poor judgment, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s national security advisor testified yesterday. Nathalie Drouin’s remarks at the China inquiry contradicted a federal report stating unnamed legislators were in the pay of foreign embassies: “I’ve seen no treason, no traitors.”

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CBC Ads Down Another 10%

CBC-TV advertising revenue fell another 10 percent last year, according to new financial accounts. Management in a report to Parliament said it expected no improvement in years ahead: “Television and radio audiences will continue to erode.”

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Senator Sorry For Censorship

A Liberal-appointed senator yesterday apologized for censoring a newspaper commentary written by a Conservative opponent. Senator Lucie Moncion (Ont.) invoked her authority as chair of the Senate’s committee on internal economy in rewriting an opinion piece she deemed “incorrect.”

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Collected $528K In 72 Hours

Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre raised some half-million dollars in pre-election Conservative Party donations over 72 hours in Toronto, according to newly released filings. The fundraising coincided with remarks by the Liberals’ campaign co-chair that “this is going to be a tight race.”

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Blair, 70, Worked From Home

Evidence at the China inquiry yesterday depicted Defence Minister Bill Blair, 70, as distracted and ineffectual. Witnesses testified Blair liked to work from home and had employees explain what security memos meant rather than reading the documents himself: “We were aware when drivers went to his house.”

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Should Have Given Warning

Legislators targeted by Chinese Communist Party agents should have been warned in person, the Department of Public Safety said yesterday. Canadian MPs were among 400 parliamentarians worldwide who were targeted by Chinese hackers in 2021: “Is the current system adequate? No.”

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Firms ‘Addicted’ To Migrants

Canadian employers have become addicted to migrant labour, Immigration Minister Marc Miller told the Senate last evening. Miller in November is expected to table a new Immigration Levels Plan that cuts the number of temporary foreign workers let into the country: “All of them ask for more and more.”

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Bloc Ultimatum Worth $20B

A make-or-break Bloc Québécois bill to raise Old Age Security would cost almost $20 billion over six years, the highest estimate to date, says a federal Briefing Binder. Bloc leader Yves-François Blanchet has warned the bill must pass into law by Halloween or his caucus will “bring down the government.”

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Feds Want 3% Irish Land Tax

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday said cabinet would like to adopt an Irish-style three percent annual federal tax on vacant lots. The Department of Finance opened consultations on the proposal: “Ireland has an example of a measure like this.”

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Premier Wanted China Check

British Columbia Premier David Eby asked the Prime Minister’s Office for security checks on provincial candidates including members of his own New Democratic Party, records show. An internal memo yesterday disclosed at the Commission on Foreign Interference said Eby worried about “covert ties to foreign states or significant organized crime links.”

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