Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberals' Point Man In The Senate Looks For $800,000 To Set Up Shop

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2016 12:47 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government's point man in the Senate says he needs more than $800,000 from the upper chamber to effectively do his job.
     
    Peter Harder told a Senate committee Thursday morning that he wasn't asking for anything more or less than what Conservative Sen. Claude Carignan received when he was government leader.
     
    Carignan had to ask the Senate for office money because he was not a part of then prime minister Stephen Harper's cabinet like his predecessors, which made him ineligible for financial help from the Privy Council Office.
     
    Harder says he asked the Privy Council Office for money and was told none would be coming.
     
    Senators on the internal economy committee, which oversees Senate spending, punted the request to a sub-committee that has yet to have members appointed to it.
     
    Harder was among a group of seven senators who took their seats in the Senate this week — the first batch of senators appointed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau under a new appointments process.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Parties Accuse Each Other Of Over-promising In Manitoba Election Campaign

    Parties Accuse Each Other Of Over-promising In Manitoba Election Campaign
    NDP Leader Greg Selinger says the Liberal promise to institute full-day kindergarten across the province would cost a lot more than the $50 million a year they say it will

    Parties Accuse Each Other Of Over-promising In Manitoba Election Campaign

    Accused In Murder Of Nova Scotia Officer Confessed To Crime: Police Affidavit

    Accused In Murder Of Nova Scotia Officer Confessed To Crime: Police Affidavit
    Christopher Calvin Garnier is facing charges of second-degree murder and indecently interfering with a dead body in connection with the death of 36-year-old Catherine Campbell in September.

    Accused In Murder Of Nova Scotia Officer Confessed To Crime: Police Affidavit

    Oil Industry Downturn Makes For Low Bidding For Stampede Chuckwagon Ads

    Oil Industry Downturn Makes For Low Bidding For Stampede Chuckwagon Ads
    The 45-year-old chuckwagon driver was one of the first to lose his job in 2015 in community relations at a major oil and gas company after 15 years on the job.

    Oil Industry Downturn Makes For Low Bidding For Stampede Chuckwagon Ads

    Philippe Couillard Again Distances Himself From Previous Government Following Normandeau Arrest

    Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard continues to distance himself from the previous Liberal government a day after the arrest of ex-deputy premier Nathalie Normandeau.

    Philippe Couillard Again Distances Himself From Previous Government Following Normandeau Arrest

    YVR Breaks Record: Named #1 Airport in North America for Seven Years in a Row

    YVR Breaks Record: Named #1 Airport in North America for Seven Years in a Row
    YVR is the first airport in the world to win seven years in a row, breaking the record for consecutive Skytrax awards.

    YVR Breaks Record: Named #1 Airport in North America for Seven Years in a Row

    Premier Christy Clark Says New Rules Aim To End 'Pure, Naked Greed' In Housing Sales

    'Shadow Flipping' Loophole To Be Closed,  Christy Clark says a few bad apples are blemishing the reputation of many in the industry

    Premier Christy Clark Says New Rules Aim To End 'Pure, Naked Greed' In Housing Sales