Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Eighty-six per cent of Commons witnesses spoke English in hybrid Parliament: Bloc

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2021 11:11 AM
  • Eighty-six per cent of Commons witnesses spoke English in hybrid Parliament: Bloc

OTTAWA - The committee in charge of administering the House of Commons is set to look into whether the hybrid Parliament is forcing French-speaking MPs and committee witnesses to speak English.

The Bloc Québécois says the issue is "very concerning" and has persuaded the board of internal economy to look into whether poor audio quality is leading to less interpretation into French, and from French into English.

The hybrid Parliament, which allows MPs and witnesses to committees to participate via videolink, puts a strain on interpreters, often because of poor audio quality.

Some interpreters in the last hybrid Parliament suffered injuries to their ears and had to take time off.

The Bloc's whip, Claude DeBellefeuille, told the board that 86 per of witnesses who gave evidence to Commons committees in the last hybrid Parliament spoke in English.

The party's deputy House leader, Christine Normandin, says she is concerned that English-speaking MPs and ministers have not always been interpreted into French in debates.

Earlier this week, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault addressed the House of Commons remotely but no French interpretation was available.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Warning needed about weather: First Nations leader

Warning needed about weather: First Nations leader
Terry Teegee, regional chief of the B.C. Assembly of First Nations, said the province could have acted faster after a heat dome this summer claimed nearly 600 lives and a wildfire destroyed much of the town of Lytton in the Fraser Canyon.    

Warning needed about weather: First Nations leader

VPD investigates multiple stabbings in Yaletown

VPD investigates multiple stabbings in Yaletown
The five victims, all men from Surrey and Langley, suffered a variety of stab wounds, including injuries to their faces, stomachs, backs, and legs. The injuries are not life-threatening. Two suspects in their 30s, also men from Surrey, have been identified but are not currently in custody.    

VPD investigates multiple stabbings in Yaletown

Revenues up, deficit down in pre-flood B.C. update

Revenues up, deficit down in pre-flood B.C. update
Selina Robinson says the province will factor in the cleanup costs associated with the disastrous floods and mudslides that hit communities, highways and railways in February's budget.

Revenues up, deficit down in pre-flood B.C. update

Another rainstorm expected to hit Canada's British Columbia

Another rainstorm expected to hit Canada's British Columbia
Environment Canada also warned of heavy snow in inland parts of the province on Sunday, saying that the snow could change to heavy rain as the temperature rises.

Another rainstorm expected to hit Canada's British Columbia

Calgary rugby player named as B.C. mudslide victim

Calgary rugby player named as B.C. mudslide victim
Last Monday, as flooding and mudslides ravaged British Columbia, Dean Hopkins got a distraught call from his close friend's wife, saying her husband was missing. That phone call kicked off several stress-filled days for Hopkins, which ended in tragedy when his old rugby buddy Steven Taylor was confirmed dead.    

Calgary rugby player named as B.C. mudslide victim

Keep wasted COVID-19 shots under 5 per cent: PHAC

Keep wasted COVID-19 shots under 5 per cent: PHAC
The Public Health Agency of Canada says it hopes to keep the number of wasted doses of COVID-19 vaccines in Canada under five per cent. That would amount to 3.7 million of the 73.7 million vaccines that have been distributed to provinces and territories, used by the federal government or held in the central vaccine inventory as of Nov. 18.

Keep wasted COVID-19 shots under 5 per cent: PHAC