The Commons heritage committee proposes hearings on policing internet content ruled offensive. Parliament has already banned hate speech under 1970 amendments to the Criminal Code: "To hell with that, sir."
History Revisions Underway
Parks Canada in internal memos proposes wholesale revisions to historic plaques deemed offensive or “colonialist”. The agency in Access To Information memos named three historic figures who “need to be reviewed” as great Canadians: "There is controversy."
Never Enforced 2014 Tax Law
Cabinet will not explain why it's failed to enforce a 2014 law capping fees charged by tax advisors. Regulations were drafted by the Canada Revenue Agency last year but never finalized: "The bill passed the House of Commons unanimously, and then the lobbyists descended."
MPs Question Hidden Files
MPs seek to question the Treasury Board over a deliberate slowdown in disclosure of public records. Cabinet allowed the closure of Access To Information offices for the first time since 1983 as a pandemic precaution, it said: "There are people whose actual job it is to produce information for Parliament who are sitting at home."
Federal Holiday Not For All
A holiday bill to observe Indigenous reconciliation will not affect most workers or students. The cabinet bill would designate September 30 as a National Day for Truth and Reconciliation only for federally-regulated employees: "It is always just words here."
Sunday Poem: “Crystal Ball”
Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “In the year 2056, Chapters will announce a major expansion to its gift section…”
MPs Demand Pandemic Files
The Commons votes Monday on whether to compel Health Minister Patricia Hajdu’s department to disclose records on early mismanagement of the pandemic, including mask shortages. MPs have sought the records since May 29: "The time for hiding stuff is over."
Find Oddity In Election Law
MPs yesterday questioned a quirk in the Canada Elections Act that allows cabinet to cancel general election balloting in any local riding due to a pandemic. Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault told the House affairs committee the scenario was “extreme” but possible: "Have you consulted with the Prime Minister?"
Tornado Claim Is Overblown
There is no evidence Canada has more tornadoes now than it did in the past, says a senior Department of Environment meteorologist. Then-Environment Minister Catherine McKenna cited claims of increased tornado activity in sponsoring a 2019 motion to have Parliament declare a climate emergency: "I do not need to tell Canadians just about the science."
CBC-TV Gets A Covid Bailout
Cabinet proposes a pandemic bailout of CBC-TV to compensate for falling advertising revenue. The Crown broadcaster and Department of Canadian Heritage yesterday did not comment: "They’ve got to do more than just say, ‘Give us more money.'"
Rewrite For Citizenship Oath
Cabinet yesterday introduced a bill to rewrite the Oath Of Citizenship. Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino called it “one more vital step toward reconciliation” with First Nations, Inuit and Métis.
19-Hour Filibuster Grinds On
A rolling filibuster of We Charity disclosures last night entered its nineteenth hour at the Commons finance committee. Liberal MPs killed time reciting Acts of Parliament, quoting Aristotle and reading emails and letters into the record line by line: "There is no corruption."
MPs Veto Corruption Probe
The Commons by a vote of 180 to 146 yesterday rejected a Special Committee on Anti-Corruption. New Democrat MPs joined with Liberals in dismissing the investigation: "They finagled and squirreled away the NDP’s vote but one has to keep up appearances."
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."
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."



