Bill Imposes CBSA Oversight

Cabinet yesterday introduced legislation for first-ever independent oversight of the Canada Border Services Agency. Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale acknowledged it’s the only police force in the country that is not monitored by a civilian board: ‘It is essential to ensuring the public’s confidence.’

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Auditors So-So On Ad Ban

Auditors yesterday said a federal ban on partisan government advertising appeared arbitrary and haphazard. Cabinet in 2016 promised to abolish partisan marketing at taxpayers’ expense: ‘A politically-sensitive campaign such as a climate change could avoid external review.’

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Deny Listing Media Friends

Cabinet in an Inquiry Of Ministry tabled in the Commons says it does not have an actual list of agreeable journalists it assigns to write Liberal-friendly commentaries. “No such lists exists,” wrote staff: “Is that a common practice?”

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Seek Quota On Vets Hiring

Federal departments and agencies should fix quotas for hiring medically-released veterans, the Commons committee on government operations was told yesterday. Veterans and advocates complain of poor compliance with a 2015 Act that promised priority hiring for ex-soldiers, sailors and air crew: “How effective is the Act?”

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Judge Rejects VIA Bias Claim

A federal judge has dismissed a complaint of discrimination against VIA Rail for failing the only woman to attend a locomotive engineer training course. The woman claimed VIA falsified her test scores after she refused a date with her instructor: “She was not successful in any aspect of the program.”

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China Junket Cost $35,009

A parliamentary group was “positively received” on a $35,009 junket to China despite the arbitrary arrest of Canadians in the People’s Republic, says a report. Legislators and their Communist Party hosts expressed mutual admiration for Chinese history, wrote staff: ‘Norman Bethune was repeatedly discussed.’

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Pipeline Gets More Expensive

The Crown agency managing the taxpayer-owned Trans Mountain Pipeline warns of risks over the “cost of the project” with continued construction delays. A subsidiary of the Canada Development Investment Corporation has borrowed $5.2 billion to date for the venture: “You promised.”

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Audit On Ads Due Tomorrow

The Auditor General tomorrow will release a review of government advertising, the first since cabinet promised to outlaw partisan self-promotion. No bill was ever introduced. Cabinet in 2016 promised “future legislation” to abolish self-serving ads at public expense: “We want to make it absolutely clear.”

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Brace For Carbon Tax Appeal

Cabinet expects the Supreme Court will have the final word on the legality of its national carbon tax. The first constitutional challenge of the tax in the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal fell on a split 3 to 2 ruling: “The Supreme Court will hear it, I’m sure.”

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Bernier’s Party Wins In Court

A federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit against MP Maxime Bernier’s People’s Party of Canada. A British Columbia businessman claimed to invent the Party’s name in 2015 but never registered it until the very day Bernier launched the official Party: “This is not a coincidence.”

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RCMP OK’d Lavalin Contract

Federal agencies including the RCMP since January 2 have awarded millions in new contracts to SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. even as government officials resigned over allegations of favouritism for the company. The Department of Public Works yesterday said the contracts were strictly routine though the firm faces trial on bribery and fraud charges: “SNC-Lavalin should be suspended.”

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Expect Court Fight On C-69

Cabinet yesterday resigned itself to a Court challenge of its bill on environmental impact assessments of energy projects. Environment Minister Catherine McKenna dismissed an Alberta claim the bill is unconstitutional: “It’s not just industry groups we listened to.”

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House Eyes Four-Day Week

The Liberal caucus yesterday tabled a motion to put the Commons on a four-day work week. A similar 2017 proposal to end Friday sittings prompted protests it would make cabinet 20 percent less accountable: “That is one less day on which the government has to stand and answer questions.”

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