Friday, March 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Conservatives seek to remove barriers to alcohol shipments across provincial borders

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2026 10:23 AM
  • Conservatives seek to remove barriers to alcohol shipments across provincial borders

The federal Conservatives are pushing to allow Canada Post to ship alcohol between provinces, saying the Liberals have failed to live up to their pledge to remove interprovincial trade barriers.

B.C. MP Dan Albas, whose riding includes the Okanagan wine region, has introduced a private member's bill that would amend the Canada Post Corporation Act to remove restrictions on direct interprovincial shipments of alcohol to consumers.

Albas said the change would "free the beer."

"We need to be our own best customers. This is a valid way to do that," he said. 

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said there are more barriers to trade between provinces than there are with many countries.

"It is currently against the law for Canada Post to deliver Canadian alcohol to Canadian consumers in six of 10 provinces," he said. "That is a federal law that Mark Carney refuses, so far, to change."

Prime Minister Mark Carney vowed during last spring's federal election campaign to eliminate trade barriers and have free trade in Canada by July 1.

The Liberals and Conservatives worked together last June to pass an omnibus bill that reduces restrictions on internal trade and speeds up permitting for large infrastructure projects.

The law targets federal restrictions on interprovincial trade and labour mobility, though most of the trade barriers within Canada are a product of regulations and laws that exist at the provincial and territorial level.

Premiers agreed at the Council of the Federation last year to tackle interprovincial trade barriers.

Some progress has been made, including a memorandum of understanding that commits all 10 provinces and Yukon to allowing consumers to buy Canadian alcohol directly from producers.

The agreement also says jurisdictions with personal use exemption limits on the amount of alcohol an individual can take across a provincial or territorial boundary "will work to either remove or increase these limits."

The provinces and territories have agreed to develop frameworks to make that happen by May of this year.

Nova Scotia and Ontario signed a deal on March 2 to allow people to buy alcohol from producers in either province.

One Canadian Economy Minister Dominic LeBlanc told Albas in question period on Tuesday that his idea to change the Canada Post Corporation Act "is a good one" and said he would raise the issue with provincial and territorial colleagues at the end of the month. 

A spokesperson for LeBlanc did not respond directly to questions about whether the government would support the Conservative legislation. 

In an emailed statement, Gabriel Brunet pointed to the deal between Nova Scotia and Ontario and said it's "something the federal government wholly supports and hopes to see replicated across the country."

Poilievre said the agreements that have been signed on interprovincial trade are "meaningless" and Carney pledged to fix the problem.

"He didn't put an asterisk next to that and claim that he wouldn't be able to do anything because the provinces would get in his way. He said he would be a strong national leader that would bring truly free trade," he said.

The federal government estimates that eliminating all federal, provincial and territorial trade barriers could boost GDP by as much as $200 billion.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Teens face 1st degree murder charges in First Nations double homicide

Teens face 1st degree murder charges in First Nations double homicide
Prosecutors say two teens apprehended last week in connection with a double homicide in a First Nations community in northern Quebec are facing first-degree murder charges.

Teens face 1st degree murder charges in First Nations double homicide

Canadians sitting on $2 billion in uncashed federal cheques: documents

Canadians sitting on $2 billion in uncashed federal cheques: documents
Canadians have left some $2 billion in funds on the table by not cashing millions of paper cheques mailed out by federal government departments.

Canadians sitting on $2 billion in uncashed federal cheques: documents

Conservatives, Poilievre seek to carry convention momentum back into Parliament

Conservatives, Poilievre seek to carry convention momentum back into Parliament
Political analysts say the federal Conservatives and leader Pierre Poilievre have momentum coming off a unifying convention in Calgary but the party still has a hill to climb in Parliament to one-up Prime Minster Mark Carney and the Liberals.

Conservatives, Poilievre seek to carry convention momentum back into Parliament

Conservatives vote to keep Pierre Poilievre as leader after speech in Calgary

Conservatives vote to keep Pierre Poilievre as leader after speech in Calgary
Pierre Poilievre's position as Conservative leader was cemented Friday after 87.4 per cent of delegates voted in a mandatory leadership review to keep him at the helm of their party.

Conservatives vote to keep Pierre Poilievre as leader after speech in Calgary

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents
The Canadian government denied convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein permission to enter the country in 2018 due to his criminal past, newly released U.S. government documents reveal.

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents

Canadian man pleads guilty to sexually exploiting 100-plus girls in the United States

Canadian man pleads guilty to sexually exploiting 100-plus girls in the United States
A 40-year-old man from Toronto has pleaded guilty in the United States for sexually exploiting more than 100 children on social media.

Canadian man pleads guilty to sexually exploiting 100-plus girls in the United States