Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

After Partisan Bickering, House Backs Motion To End Veterans Homelessness

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2019 06:25 PM

    OTTAWA — The House of Commons has backed a backbench MP's bid to have the government work to end veterans homelessness after days of partisan bickering over the fate of the private motion.


    The motion from Ontario Liberal MP Neil Ellis asks his own government to craft a plan to end veterans homelessness by 2025, in part by creating a subsidy similar to one in the United States that’s credited with helping to cut in half the number of homeless American veterans.


    Debate on the motion ended Tuesday with the Liberals blaming the Opposition Conservatives for not agreeing to an immediate vote, likely leaving the motion to die when the next election is called.


    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau chimed in Wednesday during the daily question period, saying the government supports the motion.


    Conservative critic Karen Vecchio took issue with Trudeau's comments early this afternoon, firing back before asking the Commons for its agreement to pass the motion, which MPs voted to do immediately.


    The motion isn't binding on the government but advocates see it as a symbolic victory on an issue that successive governments have not tackled.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Province raises drought level in parts of B.C., asks residents to conserve water

    Province raises drought level in parts of B.C., asks residents to conserve water
    The province says several important salmon streams on Vancouver Island are approaching critical environmental thresholds for ecosystems and fish.

    Province raises drought level in parts of B.C., asks residents to conserve water

    SNC-Lavalin delays jury decision in corruption trial until June 28

    SNC-Lavalin delays jury decision in corruption trial until June 28
    Last week a Quebec judge ruled there is enough evidence to send SNC-Lavalin to trial over charges of fraud and corruption, prompting a further tumble in the beleaguered firm's share price.    

    SNC-Lavalin delays jury decision in corruption trial until June 28

    Inuit plan says climate change can't be separated from social issues

    The Arctic is warming twice as quickly as the rest of the planet and that means the Inuit need their own plan to deal with it

    Inuit plan says climate change can't be separated from social issues

    Senators reject chance to immediately kill tanker ban but bill not safe yet

    Senators voted 53-38 to reject a committee report that recommended that Bill C-48 be scrapped; one senator abstained.

    Senators reject chance to immediately kill tanker ban but bill not safe yet

    Documents show federal push for infrastructure bank to back Via project

    The rail company wants to build a multibillion-dollar new network of dedicated passenger-rail lines in Ontario and Quebec

    Documents show federal push for infrastructure bank to back Via project

    Cabinet docs detail Mulroney challenges on China after Tiananmen Square massacre

    The big question for the Canadian Progressive Conservative government of the day was: what do we do about China now?

    Cabinet docs detail Mulroney challenges on China after Tiananmen Square massacre