Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

House Speaker splits major projects bill for two separate votes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jun, 2025 11:36 AM
  • House Speaker splits major projects bill for two separate votes

Members of Parliament will hold two separate votes on the government's major projects bill later today after the House Speaker ruled the legislation has two distinct parts.

Bill C-5, known as the one Canadian economy act, contains measures to tackle internal trade barriers and also gives the government sweeping new powers to approve major projects.

The Liberals pledged during the election campaign to pass a law to break down interprovincial trade barriers by Canada Day.

They're pushing the legislation through the House of Commons with the support of the Conservatives, and aim to have it passed by the end of the day.

The Bloc Québécois has called for the bill to be split to allow MPs more time to study the measures that deal with major projects.

New Democrat MP Jenny Kwan asked House Speaker Francis Scarpaleggia to hold separate votes on third reading, and Scarpaleggia agreed in a ruling this afternoon that the bill has two distinct parts.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Patrick Doyle

MORE National ARTICLES

Auditor general finds F-35 costs soar amid project delays, pilot shortages

Auditor general finds F-35 costs soar amid project delays, pilot shortages
The estimated cost of Canada’s incoming fleet of advanced stealth fighters exploded by nearly 50 per cent in just a few years, auditor general Karen Hogan said Tuesday in a new report.

Auditor general finds F-35 costs soar amid project delays, pilot shortages

B.C.'s youth unemployment rate second-highest in Canada with 16.6 per cent in May

B.C.'s youth unemployment rate second-highest in Canada with 16.6 per cent in May
High school students walking across graduation stages this month will step into an uncertain job market as B.C. has the second-highest youth unemployment rate in Canada. 

B.C.'s youth unemployment rate second-highest in Canada with 16.6 per cent in May

Five things to know about Canada's plan to meet the NATO defence spending target

Five things to know about Canada's plan to meet the NATO defence spending target
Prime Minister Mark Carney is promising that Canada will quickly boost its defence spending to hit the NATO member target of two per cent of national GDP this year.

Five things to know about Canada's plan to meet the NATO defence spending target

Canada Post rejects union terms for arbitration as both sides enter bitter stalemate

Canada Post rejects union terms for arbitration as both sides enter bitter stalemate
A government push to steer Canada Post and the union representing 55,000 mail workers toward common ground hit a big pothole Monday.

Canada Post rejects union terms for arbitration as both sides enter bitter stalemate

Eby says it's not him blocking Smith's oil pipeline, it's lack of money and proponent

Eby says it's not him blocking Smith's oil pipeline, it's lack of money and proponent
British Columbia Premier David Eby says it's not him standing in the way of Alberta counterpart Danielle Smith's longed-for oil pipeline from Alberta to B.C.'s north coast — it's that there's no proponent, no money and "no project right now."

Eby says it's not him blocking Smith's oil pipeline, it's lack of money and proponent

B.C. to restore housing aid to families with sick children in Vancouver hospitals

B.C. to restore housing aid to families with sick children in Vancouver hospitals
The British Columbia government says it's working to reverse changes that slashed accommodation funding for out-of-town parents whose children receive specialized hospital care in Vancouver.

B.C. to restore housing aid to families with sick children in Vancouver hospitals