Senate Budget’s Highest Ever

The Senate proposes to increase its spending this year to a record $134.9 million, new budget documents show. Increases including 10 percent more for administration costs follow cabinet’s promise to cut discretionary spending in 2024: “You will see that all the ministries need to ensure they are doing their part to reduce wasteful spending.”

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Worried About China Fallout

Cabinet quietly polled Chinese Canadian electors on how to improve relations while rejecting demands for a public inquiry into foreign agents, records show. Federal focus group researchers asked, “Are there any challenges impacting Chinese Canadians that the federal government should be prioritizing?”

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Feds Warned On Housing Bill

A federal bill to construct more rental housing is so poorly drafted it “could inadvertently discourage the supply of rental housing,” warns the Canadian Bar Association. Housing Minister Sean Fraser said he’s counting on builders for “200,000 to 300,000 new homes” as a result of the bill that passed Parliament three weeks ago: ‘It is all or nothing.’

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Free Lawyering For Tenants

Taxpayers should hire free lawyers for tenants facing eviction, says a report issued by Federal Housing Advocate Marie-Josée Houle. The report complained renters are at the mercy of landlords seen as “being more desirable citizens than those who do not own property.”

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Predict 40-Year Breakthrough

The Green Party is “going to surprise people” in the next election, MP Elizabeth May (Saanich-Gulf Islands, B.C.) yesterday told reporters. The Party has elected four MPs in the past 40 years: “We stand here alone. I don’t see anybody else.”

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CRTC Will Draft News Code

Federal regulators may draft a pre-election “code of conduct” for newsrooms, cabinet yesterday wrote in a legal notice. The Department of Heritage said under Bill C-18 the Online News Act already in effect, newsrooms are subject to CRTC guidance on ethics: “We will have to get precise on that.”

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Pharmacare No Winner: Feds

Canadians are indifferent to pharmacare and see more pressing health care problems, says in-house Privy Council research. The federal polling predated cabinet’s decision to renege on a vote pact with New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh to pass a pharmacare bill by December 31: “Few felt this to be a significant issue.”

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Food Costs Didn’t “Stabilize”

Costs of most foods went up not down after Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne claimed to “stabilize” prices, Statistics Canada figures showed yesterday. Champagne promised “the best possible deal for Canadians” at supermarket check-outs following a September 18 meeting with grocers: “What does that mean?”

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Agency Wrong But Blameless

The Canada Revenue Agency has been found blameless after misplacing a tax filer’s claim for some $200,000 in credits. The outcome was “very frustrating” but followed the letter of the law, said a Tax Court judge: “Unfortunately even when an error has been committed by the Canada Revenue Agency the requirements of the Income Tax Act must be met.”

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Bill Charges For Limos, Taxis

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland billed thousands for limousines and taxis in Toronto despite claims she relied on her climate-friendly bicycle and public transit, Access To Information records show. Canadians expected cabinet to “ask ourselves what we did today to fight climate change,” said Freeland: “I can live that way.”

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Hands Off Internet, A.G. Told

Canadians don’t need cabinet’s help in safely using the internet, says in-house Privy Council research. Federal pollsters warned of censorship worries as Attorney General Arif Virani studies “best practices” on regulating legal content: ‘They expressed reservations about the potential for censorship by the federal government.’

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Targeted Christian Employers

The Department of Employment continues to discriminate against Christian employers applying for Canada Summer Jobs grants, Church petitioners have written the Commons human resources committee. A federal judge three years ago ruled Christian employers could not be singled out for hectoring: “Groups are being flagged because of their beliefs, not their actions.”

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Puts Health Dep’t To The Test

A billion-dollar class action lawsuit alleging Canada’s bestselling herbicide causes cancer will put federal regulators to the test, an advocacy group said yesterday. The class action suit against Roundup brand glyphosate was certified in Ontario Superior Court: ‘A central argument is glyphosate must be safe because it has been approved by Health Canada.’

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