More Seniors Than Kids In ’23

Canada by 2023 will have more seniors than children for the first time in the nation’s history, the Chief Actuary said yesterday. Researchers predicted total costs of old age pensions will climb to about six times the current military budget: “People will live longer and work longer.”

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Demand Ban On Slave Goods

A panel of MPs yesterday said Parliament must ensure federal agencies are not buying slave-made goods from China. The Department of Public Works has acknowledged it cannot be sure masks and other pandemic supplies it contracted in China were not made by forced labour: “It scares me greatly.”

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Paper Cheques Still Popular

The Department of Public Works spent nearly $2 million mailing pension payments last year following a failed scheme to abolish paper cheques. The program ended after more than a third of Canadians said they were wary of surrendering direct deposit information to the government: “I don’t trust it.”

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Fed Up With Conflict Probes

MPs huddled in late-night strategy sessions after Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez threatened cabinet would resign and force an election to preempt committee investigations of federal contracting and conflicts of interest. A Commons vote is expected at 3:30 pm ET: “Is the government trying to hide something?”

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MPs Prepare For Winter Vote

The House affairs committee yesterday unanimously endorsed an election readiness motion on a chance the 43rd Parliament quickly unravels. MPs voted to “identify measures” needed to conduct a national vote in a pandemic: “An election could be approaching at any time. We don’t know when.”

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Feds Pay Media For Role Play

The Department of National Defence nearly tripled a budget to hire current and former reporters to coach officers on “media techniques”, say Access To Information records. Journalists were paid $750 a day to conduct fake interviews with employees: “There were exercises on how to hold a scrum.”

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Sponsors Paid Trudeau $1.3M

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday disclosed he collected more than $1.3 million in speaking fees from private sponsors over a six-year period from 2006 to 2012. Cabinet released the records to preempt Conservative calls for wider disclosure of records: ‘That would paralyze the government.’

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CRA Like Needle In Haystack

The Canada Revenue Agency admits its website is “scattered”, uses “technical language” and is so complicated that “using CRA materials to find information was like finding a needle in a haystack”. The findings of an internal evaluation follow repeated calls to simplify the 3,269-page Income Tax Act: “Our tax system has become a ponderous, unwieldy monster.”

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Ponder Electric Car Mandate

The Commons environment committee yesterday voted 11-0 to study a federal mandate on electric cars. The vote follows Department of Transport data showing rebates for buyers are the costliest federal climate change subsidy: “Canada’s efforts are failing.”

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Would Hire CEO As Advisor

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation proposes to hire its retiring CEO as a consultant. Evan Siddall in a filing with the Ethics Commissioner said he did not vote to award any contract to himself: “I recused myself in order to avoid a situation of conflict.”

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