Federal regulators should be more transparent with investigations of environmental scofflaws, say MPs. The Commons environment committee expressed unease over a settlement with Volkswagen at a fraction what the automaker paid to U.S. regulators: “This works out to about $55,000 per vehicle in the United States versus $1,500 per vehicle in Canada.”
Must Do Your Bit On Climate
The Supreme Court judge who upheld the federal carbon tax yesterday said all Canadians must do their part to lower carbon emissions, but did not detail his own efforts to fight climate change. “It’s not everybody for instance who can use a bicycle,” said Chief Justice Richard Wagner, who is provided a car with chauffeur: “You have to try your best.”
First Exec Shamed Since 1891
MPs yesterday in a 176-150 vote censured the president of the Public Health Agency, Iain Stewart, and summoned him to the bar of the House to be formally cited for contempt. It is the first public shaming of a federal executive on the floor of the Commons in 130 years: “We settle this by democracy.”
Plan Pre-Election Racism Blitz
Heritage Minister Steven Gulbeault’s department plans a pre-election advertising blitz on racism to “deal with pressing, urgent or emergency-driven marketing that may arise.” The “social cohesion” campaign targeting white voters is set for launch in September: ‘It is targeted to non-racialized Canadians, middle aged adults and non-racialized Canadian adults.’
Question Police ‘Malfeasance’
Police unions should not “protect officers from consequences of malfeasance,” the chair of the Commons public safety committee said yesterday. The committee in a report recommended RCMP officers cited for racial profiling be publicly named: “I would stand by that comment.”
MPs Ban Phone Voting, 6-5
MPs yesterday banned telephone voting in an expected pandemic election, a measure sought by cabinet. The House affairs committee by a 6-5 vote prohibited returning officers from collecting votes by phone under an obscure provision of the Canada Elections Act: “This is pretty significant.”
Faces Censure For Contempt; Hid Files On RCMP Lab Raid
Iain Stewart, president of the Public Health Agency, faces censure for contempt of Parliament over the hiring of Chinese scientists at a federal lab. The Agency defied MPs in refusing to disclose documents concerning an RCMP raid that led to the researchers’ firing January 20. “People do sneak through,” a cabinet appointee said yesterday.
C.R.A. Forgot To Pay Its Bills
Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthillier in a report to Parliament said her own agency defaulted on more than $200,000 in credit charges. The costs were run up on government-issue credit cards used by employees: “We note the increased pressure to spend budgets at fiscal year-end.”
MPs Proclaim ‘French Nation’
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday joined a Commons majority in passing a Bloc motion declaring Québec a French nation, 281-2. Trudeau did not speak on the motion. Thirty-four MPs abstained: “There will be consequences.”
MPs Would Ban Wage Fixing
Parliament should amend the Competition Act to criminally prosecute wage fixing by grocers, the Commons industry committee said yesterday. The report followed suspicions of collusion between supermarket chains in rolling back a $2 an hour employees’ pandemic bonus: “I took care to ask our lawyers before making that call.”
House Kills Dental Program
The Commons yesterday by a 285-36 vote rejected a national dental care program. Free dentistry for low income households would cost about $1.6 billion a year, according to the Parliamentary Budget Office: “This is a problem we can fix and we must fix.”
Had $18,902 Exec Washroom
The Public Health Agency faulted for failing to prepare for the pandemic spent almost $19,000 on an executive washroom for exclusive use by its president, records show. Kristina Namiesniowski abruptly resigned last September 18 only days ahead of an internal audit of Agency mismanagement: “The Agency lacked everything.”
MPs Reject Lib Judges’ Probe
The Commons justice committee yesterday dismissed an investigation of Liberal Party vetting of federal judicial appointments. Opposition MPs had asked that Attorney General David Lametti appear for questioning on the use of Party lists in hiring judges: “It undermines the credibility of those people who have been appointed to the bench.”
Must Speak French: Cabinet
Private sector employers for the first time face requirements to speak French under a cabinet bill yesterday introduced in the Commons. Airports, banks, grain mills, interprovincial trucking companies, radio stations, railways, marine shippers and other federally-regulated companies must embrace bilingualism in provinces with a “strong francophone presence,” though the term was not defined: “It is up to us to protect French.”
Bankruptcy Rewrite Gets Lost
Exasperated supporters of a bankruptcy law rewrite to benefit pensioners yesterday said the Commons industry committee has spent too much time examining the bill. Parliament is scheduled to adjourn a week from today for a three-month recess: “We’re just going on and on and time is running out.”



