Parliamentary investigations of federal contracting with We Charity and others are “petty politics”, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday told reporters. The Commons ethics committee will try again Thursday to obtain records on more than $758,000 in payments to the Trudeau family by We Charity and others: "That is their choice."
Cannot Sell Pot Near Schools
You can’t sell marijuana near a schoolhouse, Ontario Superior Court has ruled. Judges dismissed complaints a no-cannabis zone around schools was miscalculated “as the crow flies”.
Red Tape Hard On Small Biz
Costs of federal regulations fall heaviest on small business, says a Department of Industry study. Researchers said businesses with fewer than five employees or as little as $30,000 in yearly revenue faced a “heavy regulatory burden”.
Feds’ Filibuster In Week Two
A cabinet filibuster to block disclosure of corporate sponsorship fees paid to the Prime Minister’s family is now in its second week. Liberal MPs on the Commons ethics committee have delayed a vote to release records detailing hundreds of thousands paid to Trudeaus: "We’re not talking about $1 or $200, we’re talking about a lot."
2nd Wave Aid Too Late: MPs
Second-wave subsidies for small business come too late for thousands driven to insolvency by pandemic shutdown orders, say MPs. Cabinet pledged $13 billion in new aid under old programs so complex they were undersubscribed: "People have put their sweat and tears into their business."
Car Rebates Are Costly: Feds
Electric car rebates are the costliest federal climate change program, according to Department of Transport figures. The department estimated cuts to greenhouse gas emissions as a direct result of cash rebates cost taxpayers nearly $900 per tonne in the first year of the program: "An audit has not yet been completed."
Blacklist Plastic With Mercury
Cabinet is serving legal notice it will blacklist plastic as toxic under the same federal law that regulates asbestos and mercury. The Department of Environment acknowledged industry complaints the listing “could lead to the stigmatization of plastics”.
‘Armchair Talks’ For $8.2M
A federal agency launched in 2015 to “create a public service that is more agile” spent most of its budget on salaries and benefits for employees assigned to hold “armchair meetings”, say auditors. Staff complained they were underfunded: 'Innovation has been slow.'
Book Review: Li’l Men On Campus
They say the carpet in the House of Commons is green to symbolize the meeting grounds of Old England where farmers and townspeople gathered to solve numerous and vexing problems. The Commons today is populated by professional politicians skilled in contrariness, accomodation and dissent. It works.
Author Peter MacKinnon writes of the other commons found at university campuses, populated by political amateurs skilled in histrionics and entitlement. It is not a flattering exposé. MacKinnon is provocative: “Members of the general public who hear of these controversies might well ask, ‘What on earth is going on in our universities?’”
Fuel Tax Could Hit 69 Cents
The federal carbon tax must increase fivefold, up to $289 per tonne or 69¢ per litre of gasoline, if cabinet is to meet emissions targets, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. The report confirmed a secret 2015 memo the Department of Environment earlier dismissed as hypothetical: "So, the question is -- ?"
Fear Release Of Trudeau Fees
Liberal MPs yesterday expressed alarm that talent fees privately paid to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his family will become public. The Commons ethics committee has sought records from the Trudeaus’ talent agent since July 22: "Once it is out electronically, it’s out."
‘Page After Page Of Black Ink’
Cabinet faces a Commons vote that would force disclosure of uncensored records on its dealings with the now-disbanded We Charity. Staff blacked out whole pages of emails and memos in breach of a finance committee order, according to the Commons Law Clerk: "We have the right to see those documents."
Demands A Surtax On Profits
Parliament must impose a surtax on excess corporate profits, New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh yesterday told reporters. Singh stopped short of threatening to withhold twenty-four NDP votes from any minority Liberal budget bill: “This is fundamental.”
MPs Eye Electric Car Law
The Bloc Québécois yesterday proposed the Commons environment committee consider the feasibility of a federal Zero-Emission Vehicles Act mandating electric cars. A similar British Columbia law would abolish the private sale of gas and diesel-powered vehicles by 2040: "Could we provide further incentives?"
Tax Ombudsman Has Friends
A newly-appointed federal Taxpayers’ Ombudsman has friends in cabinet, according to filings with the Ethics Commissioner. François Boileau of Toronto was named to the $153,700-a year post though he had no expertise in tax matters: "They have to be more serious than that."



