Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna yesterday said 20,000 public works projects are legitimate though the Parliamentary Budget Office can find no trace of them. Analysts said they have tried for months to get a complete list of subsidized projects claimed by McKenna’s department: “Can you explain?”
Wary Of Fire Sale To China
The Commons industry committee yesterday by a 6-4 vote agreed to review measures to preempt any fire sale of cash-strapped Canadian energy companies to China. “Are we allowing authoritarian countries and government to purchase strategic assets in Canada?” asked Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner (Calgary Nose Hill).
Want To Give Kids The Vote
Nearly half of candidates for Parliament would lower the voting age to 16, Elections Canada said yesterday. A survey of candidates in the 2019 campaign found seven percent of elected MPs – the legislators were not named – are “dissatisfied” with democracy in Canada: “How satisfied are you?”
Hints At Bankruptcy Change
Cabinet will “absolutely ensure that pensions are protected” under federal bankruptcy law, Labour Minister Filomena Tassi said yesterday. The remarks came in the Commons amid fears the pandemic will trigger a wave of insolvencies: “Will the government fix the laws, yes or no?”
Billionaire Loses Tax Appeal
Billionaire Guy Laliberté has lost a tax ruling by the Federal Court of Appeal that a 2009 space junket was a deductible business expense. The founder of Cirque du Soleil attempted to write off millions he spent to fulfill a “childhood fantasy”: “He failed.”
Cannot Find 20,000 Projects
Parliament’s Budget Office can find no evidence of 20,000 projects subsidized with billions in federal tax dollars. Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna’s department would not document where funds were spent, the Commons government operations committee was told: “I don’t have proof that they exist.”
MPs Order Gov’t Disclosure
MPs have ordered the Department of Health to disclose records on mismanagement of its $300 million national stockpile of pandemic equipment. The Commons government operations committee voted 10-0 to compel release of evidence, including how many million pandemic masks were thrown away by the Public Health Agency: “This is a national scandal.”
Claims Are Suspiciously High
Cabinet’s $2,000 pandemic relief cheques are paid out with “very little oversight” and appear generous enough to attract bogus claims, says Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux. Payments can be “much more attractive” than finding work, he said: “The numbers keep rising.”
CRA Essential When It Works
The Canada Revenue Agency says its 1-800 lines are an “essential service” though millions of callers never get to speak to an agent. Records show average wait times are so long – nearly ten minutes – taxpayers were told by the CRA to phone their Member of Parliament instead: ‘They’re just trying to file their taxes.’
TV Show Not The Real Thing
TV pandemic updates by cabinet ministers are a poor substitute for parliamentary accountability, says the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. Daily televised news conferences see ministers read scripts and take questions from media selected by political aides: “There’s no question there’s an absence of accountability.”
Feds Set A Borrowing Record
Cabinet borrowed more than a third of a trillion dollars in 27 days, the Commons finance committee was told last night. The unprecedented borrowing was to finance pandemic relief programs: “Brace for the coming storm.”
Won’t Disclose Exec Bonuses
Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna yesterday would not tell Parliament how much was paid in six-figure bonuses to a former CEO of the Canada Infrastructure Bank. The executive abruptly resigned April 3: ‘Is this a good way to spend taxpayers’ money?”
Less Than 1% Get A Hearing
Less than one percent of consumer complaints against airlines ever get a federal hearing, data show. The Canadian Transportation Agency yesterday would not comment on its backlog of thousands of complaints of lost luggage, cancelled flights and poor service: “Passengers will not get a dime.”
“Follow The Trail Of Bodies”
Pandemics are trickier in real life than in the movies where “you can easily follow the trail of bodies”, says Canada’s deputy chief public health officer. Dr. Howard Njoo made the comment in a YouTube appearance in which he also divulged the national infection rate is likely to be three times greater than claimed by the Public Health Agency: “It might actually be easier if it’s like, you know, some of the movies.”
Admit Subsidy Didn’t Work
A key pandemic relief program intended to save business payrolls has not worked as planned, the Department of Finance admitted last night. Cabinet is expected to introduce more changes to the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy: “Why do you think that is?”



