Morneau Was $10,900 Man

The Department of Foreign Affairs spent $10,900 trying to get Bill Morneau a job in Paris, according to financial records. Expenses did not include pay for nineteen employees who worked part-time on Morneau’s failed campaign for election as secretary-general of the OECD: “This result was not what Canada hoped.”

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Panel OKs 56% Debt Increase

The Commons finance committee yesterday by a 7-4 vote upheld a 56 percent increase in the federal debt ceiling, from $1.168 trillion to $1,831,000,000,000. The vote came in advance of an April 19 budget: “Why not two trillion? Why not five trillion? Why even have a ceiling?”

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Bank Must Disclose Bonuses

The Commons transport committee in an 11-0 vote yesterday ordered the Canada Infrastructure Bank to surrender details of confidential million-dollar bonuses to executives. MPs have sought the information for a year: “Frankly I don’t think the performance of the Bank to date has warranted bonuses.”

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NHL Endorses Bookies’ Bill

The NHL yesterday endorsed a bill to legalize bookmaking in Canada after it invested in four legal bookies in the U.S. and Australia. Betting on a single sporting event has been a crime in Canada since 1892. “We are not turning our venues into casinos,” said a League official.

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Speaker Clears Election Act

Commons Speaker Anthony Rota yesterday ruled a pandemic election bill can proceed despite confusion over counting of mail-in ballots. A Conservative MP had said the legal text was so garbled the bill should be withdrawn and rewritten: “The error could be corrected.”

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Bank Drew Zero Investments

A Canada Infrastructure Bank intended to save taxpayers’ money on public works has not attracted a penny in private investment in four years, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. “Projects don’t get built in a day,” Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna earlier told MPs.

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Warehoused $700M In Orders

Health Minister Patricia Hajdu’s department paid more than $700 million for pandemic ventilators it didn’t need, MPs were told yesterday. Ninety-eight percent of costly devices delivered under rush orders through sole-sourced contracts were warehoused: “It’s come to light that we do need less.”

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MPs Demand Health Records

The Public Health Agency yesterday was ordered for a second time to disclose records detailing mismanagement of medical stockpiles. The Agency earlier ignored a November 2 order that it detail actual numbers of masks and other supplies it threw out before the pandemic: “We threw away millions.”

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‘Answer The Damn Question’

Iain Stewart, president of the Public Health Agency, last night refused to tell MPs why two Chinese scientists were fired from a federal lab while under RCMP investigation. MPs said the case smacked of a security breach involving the husband and wife research team that that made numerous trips to China: “That is just bureaucratic butt-covering.”

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We Charity Exec Defies MPs

Victor Li, chief financial officer for We Charity, yesterday was threatened with contempt of Parliament if he does not answer MPs’ questions by Friday. The Commons ethics committee has sought details of We Charity finances for eight months: “I am just getting rather frustrated with the sense of entitlement.”

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Post Office Gets 4th Citation

Federal labour inspectors have cited Canada Post for breach of health regulations, the fourth citation in eight weeks. The post office had boasted its plants were virtually Covid-free in early months of the pandemic but has since stopped reporting rates of infection: “The employer has failed.”

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No Comment On Bully Claim

The Assembly of First Nations yesterday did not comment on claims political aides to National Chief Perry Bellegarde bullied Indigenous women reporters. The allegations are detailed in a federal report to a United Nations agency: “Intimidation against female Indigenous journalists can come from Indigenous political leaders.”

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Communists On The Payroll

A contractor managing Canada’s visa office in Beijing says it never asked local hires if they were Communist Party organizers out of respect for employee privacy. VFS Global Inc. said it would not be surprised if Communists were on the payroll, calling the Party a “grassroots organization” in China.

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C.F.L. Wary Of Match Fixing

The Canadian Football League is endorsing a bill to legalize bookmaking so long as players, coaches, referees and linesmen are forbidden from placing bets. “The integrity of competition means everything to us,” Commissioner Randy Ambrosie wrote the Commons justice committee: “Wagering can engender concerns which must be addressed.”

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Press Subsidy Was “Unwise”

Then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau’s cabinet in 1982 opposed media subsidies as a waste of money, say declassified records. Ministers killed a draft Newspapers Act that would have paid matching grants for news coverage up to $150,000 a year: ‘It was an unwise use of scarce financial resources.’

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