Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conservatives Overrule Speaker, Force Final Vote On Controversial Labour Bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jun, 2015 11:55 AM
    OTTAWA — Conservatives in the Senate have used their majority to overrule their own Speaker and force a final vote on a controversial labour bill.
     
    Claude Carignan, the Conservative leader in the upper chamber, was backed by all but six of his own senators in shooting down a ruling by Speaker Leo Housakos that would have prevented the government from ending debate on Bill C-377.
     
    The bill would require unions and labour organizations to publicly disclose the details of their spending, including how much they spend on political activities.
     
    Allowing the government to shut down debate on private member's bills like C-377 would violate the basic principles of how the Senate operates, Housakos said.
     
    Housakos and Sen. Diane Bellemare were the only Conservatives to vote in favour of the Speaker's ruling, with Bellemare receiving a round of applause from Liberals when she cast her vote.
     
    Five more Conservatives abstained from Friday's vote.
     
    The Opposition Liberals had worried the Conservatives would use their majority in the Senate to force a final vote on C-377 and pass it despite opposition, including from seven provinces who feel the bill is unconstitutional.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Housing Starts To Slow Slightly This Year And In 2016: CMHC Q2 Outlook

    Housing Starts To Slow Slightly This Year And In 2016: CMHC Q2 Outlook
    OTTAWA — Lower crude prices are expected to help contribute to a split in the Canadian housing market that will see oil-producing provinces slow but others gain ground, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said Monday.

    Housing Starts To Slow Slightly This Year And In 2016: CMHC Q2 Outlook

    B.C. Mayor Declares Emergency, Orders Evacuations Following Violent Flooding

    B.C. Mayor Declares Emergency, Orders Evacuations Following Violent Flooding
    The mayor of a British Columbia village has declared a state of emergency and ordered dozens of residents to leave their homes after a violent storm tore through the province's Interior, leaving a trail of flooding and destruction in its wake.

    B.C. Mayor Declares Emergency, Orders Evacuations Following Violent Flooding

    Fall From Cliff In Vancouver's Stanley Park Kills 23-Year-Old Man

    Fall From Cliff In Vancouver's Stanley Park Kills 23-Year-Old Man
    VANCOUVER — Police are investigating after the body of a young man was found at the base of a seaside cliff in Vancouver's Stanley Park.

    Fall From Cliff In Vancouver's Stanley Park Kills 23-Year-Old Man

    Air Canada Begins Carry-On Clampdown In Toronto; Extend Across Country June 8

    Air Canada Begins Carry-On Clampdown In Toronto; Extend Across Country June 8
    Air Canada began its promised crackdown on oversized carry-on baggage on Monday, beginning with passengers checking in for flights in Toronto in a program it plans to expand across the country in about two weeks.

    Air Canada Begins Carry-On Clampdown In Toronto; Extend Across Country June 8

    Who? Alberta's New Energy Minister Marg Mccuaig-boyd An Unknown In The Oilpatch

    Who? Alberta's New Energy Minister Marg Mccuaig-boyd An Unknown In The Oilpatch
    CALGARY — The name Marg McCuaig-Boyd doesn't ring a bell for many in Alberta's oilpatch. The newly elected NDP politician was named Alberta's energy minister this weekend.

    Who? Alberta's New Energy Minister Marg Mccuaig-boyd An Unknown In The Oilpatch

    B.C. Fire Under Control, But Danger Remains With Undermined Trees

    B.C. Fire Under Control, But Danger Remains With Undermined Trees
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — A wildfire that has been raging for two weeks south of Prince George, B.C., is now been fully contained, but a secondary danger remains.

    B.C. Fire Under Control, But Danger Remains With Undermined Trees