Saturday, April 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Boycott leaves security panel with no Tory MPs

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Jan, 2022 12:56 PM
  • Boycott leaves security panel with no Tory MPs

OTTAWA - There are no Conservative MPs among the newly named slate of parliamentarians to oversee the security-and-intelligence community following the party's decision to boycott the body.

The government says Liberal MPs Patricia Lattanzio and James Maloney are joining the committee, filling spots most recently held by Conservatives Leona Alleslev and Rob Morrison.

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole pulled his party's MPs from the committee last spring to protest the Liberal government's refusal to hand over unredacted documents related to the firing of two scientists from Canada's highest-security laboratory.

In a Dec. 17 letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, O'Toole said the Conservative boycott of the all-party National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, known as NSICOP, would continue in the new session of Parliament until the wraps are taken off those documents.

The committee, established in 2017, has the authority to review sensitive activities across the federal government.

It submits classified reports to the prime minister, which are later tabled in Parliament in edited form.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

How to prove you're vaccinated enough to fly

How to prove you're vaccinated enough to fly
All provinces and territories have agreed to conform their proof-of-vaccine documents, or COVID-19 vaccine passports, to a national standard so that they can be used for international and domestic travel. The idea is that the standardized document will make it easier for travel authorities domestically and abroad to verify the vaccine status of Canadians.

How to prove you're vaccinated enough to fly

Cash stash found in donated clothing: Surrey RCMP

Cash stash found in donated clothing: Surrey RCMP
On September 10, 2021, a substantial amount of cash was found in a box of clothing that had been donated to a thrift store located in the 10600 block of King George Boulevard. The employee who located the cash suspected it was inadvertently donated, so they turned it into police.

Cash stash found in donated clothing: Surrey RCMP

Charges approved against 4 people including Harman Parmar in kidnapping investigation: VPD

Charges approved against 4 people including Harman Parmar in kidnapping investigation: VPD
On September 8, four suspects kidnapped the victim from a vehicle at gunpoint in Richmond, B.C. The victim suffered significant, but non-life threatening injures after being assaulted and restrained.    

Charges approved against 4 people including Harman Parmar in kidnapping investigation: VPD

Vulnerable industries must accept change is coming

Vulnerable industries must accept change is coming
The Canadian Institute for Climate Choices is warning in its publication Sink or Swim, that if these industries and federal and provincial governments don't acknowledge that change is coming and prepare for it, there could be devastating consequences.

Vulnerable industries must accept change is coming

Canadians largely content with democracy: survey

Canadians largely content with democracy: survey
The new Pew Research Center survey found 66 per cent of respondents in Canada were satisfied with how democracy is working, while 33 per cent said otherwise. Only Singapore, Sweden and New Zealand scored higher on the satisfaction scale.    

Canadians largely content with democracy: survey

Doctors group calls on B.C. to amend COVID-19 plan

Doctors group calls on B.C. to amend COVID-19 plan
The group, called Protect our Province B.C., is made up of a range of doctors and medical researchers, and held a panel discussion Wednesday highlighting how the virus is spread through aerosol transmission.

Doctors group calls on B.C. to amend COVID-19 plan