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

    Justin Trudeau At UN Promotes Ways To Move To Gender Equality

    Justin Trudeau At UN Promotes Ways To Move To Gender Equality
    The prime minister is explaining his thoughts on gender equality before a clearly approving audience at the United Nations.

    Justin Trudeau At UN Promotes Ways To Move To Gender Equality

    'Everyone Has To Start Somewhere:' Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari Still An Enigma

    'Everyone Has To Start Somewhere:' Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari Still An Enigma
    Three years later, without a seat in the legislature, the 38-year-old remains a bit of an enigma

    'Everyone Has To Start Somewhere:' Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari Still An Enigma

    Ralph Goodale Says Canada Must Be Best In The World At Stopping Radicalization

    Ralph Goodale Says Canada Must Be Best In The World At Stopping Radicalization
    Goodale says initial indications are that the man who attacked two soldiers at a north Toronto military recruitment centre was acting on his own.

    Ralph Goodale Says Canada Must Be Best In The World At Stopping Radicalization

    Kathleen Wynne Says She Worried About Pitching Tuition As Free, Says There Are Caveats

    Kathleen Wynne Says She Worried About Pitching Tuition As Free, Says There Are Caveats
    Premier Kathleen Wynne says she worried about her government pitching a new student grant program as providing "free" tuition, since there are caveats.

    Kathleen Wynne Says She Worried About Pitching Tuition As Free, Says There Are Caveats

    Woman Who Made History With Lawsuit Against Alberta Government Dies

    Woman Who Made History With Lawsuit Against Alberta Government Dies
    Leilani Muir-O'Malley, 72, died sometime over the weekend at her home in Devon, Alta., said Nicola Fairbrother, director of Neighbourhood Bridges, an advocacy group for people with intellectual disabilities.

    Woman Who Made History With Lawsuit Against Alberta Government Dies

    Homeless And Their Advocates Expect Help, Solutions In Federal Budget

    Homeless And Their Advocates Expect Help, Solutions In Federal Budget
    The fading hardwood floor of the old church, littered with pigeon feathers and dried bird droppings, creaks with every step. Below it, in the basement, is where Vince Maratt and five other tenants call home.

    Homeless And Their Advocates Expect Help, Solutions In Federal Budget