A taxpayer-funded Canadian Muslim Voting Guide published in 2019 by Wilfrid Laurier University breached federal law, says Elections Commissioner Yves Côté. The Guide that criticized opposition MPs carried a government logo and indicated it was funded by a federal agency: "The Commissioner has determined a violation was committed."
Judge Finds No C.B.S.A. Bias
A Black woman from British Columbia who spent more than twelve hours in airport custody on false suspicion of drug smuggling has lost a racial profiling complaint against the Canada Border Services Agency. Legislators have complained the Agency is the only police force in the country without independent oversight: "Persons at border crossings have reduced expectations of privacy."
No Sloganeering In Senate
The Speaker of the Senate yesterday banned pandemic masks with slogans. A Manitoba senator was ordered to remove a “Vote 16” mask that promoted amendments to the Canada Elections Act: "This is a new situation. for us."
No Charter Rights For Corp’s
Companies aren’t people and cannot claim Charter protection against cruel and unusual punishment, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday. The decision came in the case of a Québec firm fined $30,843 for selling $18,396 worth of kitchen cabinets without a permit: 'The purpose is to ensure compliance with regulations.'
“May Be” A New Green Tax
Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson yesterday said he will soon introduce legislation to meet greenhouse gas emission targets that “may” include taxes. Cabinet had promised before the 2019 election it would never raise the federal carbon tax: "It may be tax mechanisms, and it’s pricing pollution."
Public Can Afford Fed Raises
Canadians can afford to pay for wage increases for public employees, Treasury Board President Jean-Yves Duclos last night told the Commons government operations committee. Duclos defended a settlement with the largest federal public service union that pays a 2.8 percent increase retroactive to 2018, a further 2.2 percent increase last year and 1.35 percent this year: "Why?"
MPs Order Audit Suspension
The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday confirmed auditors targeted small businesses that applied for pandemic wage subsidies. MPs on a 176-152 vote ordered the audits suspended until next June: "The last thing they need is a call from the Canada Revenue Agency."
Finally Disclose Equity Costs
Parliament’s Pay Equity Act will cost federally-regulated employers almost two-thirds of a billion, the Budget Office said yesterday. The labour department claimed it could not estimate the cost when legislators passed the Act two years ago: "It’s almost an impossible task."
CMHC Name ‘Not Definite’
CMHC yesterday said a proposal to change its name is not finalized. Evan Siddall, CEO of the federal mortgage insurer, announced a new name seven weeks ago though MPs questioned the purpose: "Why does it really matter what your name is?"
CRA Quiet On Covid Audits
The Canada Revenue Agency last night would not comment on MPs’ complaints auditors have targeted small businesses drawing pandemic relief benefits. The Commons votes today on a motion to suspend audits for at least seven months: "Stop treating small business owners like tax cheaters."
Cabinet To Regulate Internet
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault yesterday introduced first-ever federal regulation of the internet, specifically streaming video services like Netflix and Disney Plus. Cabinet dropped a January 29 proposal to control digital news publishers under the Broadcasting Act: "Do we try and change everything under the sun?"
Upset By 52% Voter Turnout
MPs on the House affairs committee yesterday expressed alarm over low voter turnout in two provincial elections. Trends may see future campaigns decided by as few as a third of voters, said one MP: "It would be a tragedy."
Must Curb Porn, Senate Told
Feminists and social conservatives alike should press Parliament to restrict children’s access to online pornography, a Liberal appointee last night told the Senate. A private bill would make websites criminally responsible for inadequate controls on access by minors: "We must absolutely protect children against what is literally brainwashing."
Gov’t Fines Subsidized Firm
A federally-subsidized Atlantic seafood processor has been fined for breach of migrant labour regulations. The company yesterday described the penalty as unfair and heavy-handed: "They showed up with police at the plant."
MPs Order Health Disclosure
The Public Health Agency yesterday was ordered to disclose how many masks, gowns and other medical supplies it threw away in months prior to the pandemic. MPs on the Commons government operations committee voted 6-5 for disclosure: "It’s about the lack of the ability to be accountable for anything."



