Tuesday, March 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney to hold talks with Inuit leaders on major projects bill in N.W.T. next week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2025 09:42 AM
  • Carney to hold talks with Inuit leaders on major projects bill in N.W.T. next week

Prime Minister Mark Carney will be in Inuvik, N.W.T. on July 24 to continue talks with Indigenous groups on the government's major projects bill. 

Carney will co-host the Inuit-Crown Partnership Committee with Natan Obed, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president. 

The meeting will cover a range of issues according to the Prime Minister's Office, including how the Building Canada Act can be implemented consistent with Inuit land claims agreements and in partnership with Inuit.

The Building Canada Act gives the government the ability to fast track projects that are deemed to be in the national interest by sidestepping some review requirements under a host of federal laws.

Carney hosted a meeting with hundreds of First Nations chiefs in Gatineau, Que. Thursday in the for the first of three meetings with Indigenous groups.

Some chiefs walked out of the meeting of the summit saying they saw an insufficient response to concerns they'd been raising for weeks, while others left the meeting "cautiously optimistic."

Before travelling to Inuvik, the prime minister will also briefly visit Fort Smith, the town in the Northwest Territories where he was born and spent his early childhood.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

Edmonton school trustees, advocates want province to allow undocumented kids to enrol

Edmonton school trustees, advocates want province to allow undocumented kids to enrol
Edmonton public school trustees have voted to push Alberta's government to make legislative changes to allow undocumented kids to enrol in school.

Edmonton school trustees, advocates want province to allow undocumented kids to enrol

Canada Post puts forward ‘final offers’ to union as overtime ban continues

Canada Post puts forward ‘final offers’ to union as overtime ban continues
Canada Post on Wednesday laid out its "final offers" to the union representing 55,000 workers after negotiations resumed Wednesday morning, as tensions run high over the future of the beleaguered institution.

Canada Post puts forward ‘final offers’ to union as overtime ban continues

Never going to happen': Ministers push back as Trump revives talk of annexing Canada

Never going to happen': Ministers push back as Trump revives talk of annexing Canada
Canada's sovereignty was front and centre as federal ministers and Liberal MPs fielded questions about U.S. President Donald Trump's latest talk of annexation ahead of the first post-election question period in the House of Commons.

Never going to happen': Ministers push back as Trump revives talk of annexing Canada

Minister says CFIA following due process in B.C. ostrich cull case

Minister says CFIA following due process in B.C. ostrich cull case
The federal agriculture minister says the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is following "due process" as it prepares for a cull of about 400 ostriches at a farm in British Columbia.

Minister says CFIA following due process in B.C. ostrich cull case

Eby's 10-day Asian trade trip eyes growth potential in Malaysia

Eby's 10-day Asian trade trip eyes growth potential in Malaysia
British Columbia government staff say Malaysia is being included in an Asian trade tour by Premier David Eby and other ministers as part of a bid to diversify trade away from the United States.

Eby's 10-day Asian trade trip eyes growth potential in Malaysia

Defence minister says cost of Trump's proposed missile defence project still unknown

Defence minister says cost of Trump's proposed missile defence project still unknown
Canada does not know what it would cost to join U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed "Golden Dome" missile defence program, Defence Minister David McGuinty said Wednesday.

Defence minister says cost of Trump's proposed missile defence project still unknown