Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

MPs pass spending bill, opt to head home for summer break

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2026 10:52 AM
  • MPs pass spending bill, opt to head home for summer break

The House of Commons will rise for the summer Thursday afternoon, after unanimously voting to push through some final pieces of legislation, including the government's controversial lawful access bill.

MPs will return Sept. 21.

At a press conference outside the House of Commons, Government House leader Steven MacKinnon faced many questions regarding the Liberal's handling of C-22, including why the government rushed to get it passed before rising for the summer.

"Every day matters in this place, and a legislative achievement matters," MacKinnon told reporters.

"The Senate can now take this up as soon as they return."

Bill C-30, to implement parts the government's spring economic update, is also expected to complete third reading in the House of Commons before the House rises.

Prime Minister Mark Carney had a minority government when the spring sitting began, but it became a majority after courting five floor-crossers from opposition benches.

The Liberals used the majority to put limits on debate and push through sometimes contentious legislation, including the lawful access bill that would allow law enforcement to get access to digital information more quickly and easily.

Conservatives have called out Carney repeatedly throughout the spring sitting for frequently missing question period. The Conservatives on Tuesday said the day marked Carney's 100th absence since becoming Prime Minister.

Carney was not in the House of Commons this week at all, as he was travelling in Europe for the G7 leaders' summit.

On Thursday he was scheduled to be in Vancouver to make an announcement with B.C. Premier David Eby and attend Canada's FIFA World Cup match against Qatar.

MacKinnon dismissed concerns about Carney's absences when asked.

"I think the Prime Minister should be expected to be there, cheering on our national men's soccer team in Vancouver," he said.

The House also passed a trio of justice bills to reform bail, create new hate crime offences and criminalize AI-generated sexual deepfakes.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Mark Carney calls alleged privacy breach in Alberta deeply concerning

Mark Carney calls alleged privacy breach in Alberta deeply concerning
An Edmonton city councillor says he and his team are helping a woman facing intimate partner violence relocate with her children after her address was leaked in an alleged privacy breach by a separatist group.

Mark Carney calls alleged privacy breach in Alberta deeply concerning

Joly unveils $1.5 billion in tariff relief after Trump ratchets up trade war

Joly unveils $1.5 billion in tariff relief after Trump ratchets up trade war
The federal government is announcing $1.5 billion in tariff relief in response to the United States widening its tariff criteria last month.

Joly unveils $1.5 billion in tariff relief after Trump ratchets up trade war

Two dozen heat records fall across B.C. as wildfire risks climb

Two dozen heat records fall across B.C. as wildfire risks climb
Warm weather across British Columbia broke daily temperature records in at least 24 locations this weekend, with several spiking above 30 C.

Two dozen heat records fall across B.C. as wildfire risks climb

Eby says Burnaby, B.C., hospital expansion will go ahead, despite cancelled contract

Eby says Burnaby, B.C., hospital expansion will go ahead, despite cancelled contract
British Columbia Premier David Eby says plans for a hospital expansion in Burnaby are not dead, despite the government announcing this week that the construction contract had been cancelled. 

Eby says Burnaby, B.C., hospital expansion will go ahead, despite cancelled contract

Canada won't 'leverage' energy, critical minerals in trade talks: PM

Canada won't 'leverage' energy, critical minerals in trade talks: PM
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will not use energy or critical minerals as “leverage” in upcoming trade talks with U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration.

Canada won't 'leverage' energy, critical minerals in trade talks: PM

Bank of Canada head 'encouraged' by Ottawa's efforts to diversify economy

Bank of Canada head 'encouraged' by Ottawa's efforts to diversify economy
Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem says he's "encouraged" by the federal government's efforts to diversify the economy and protect it against increasingly common shocks to global trade.

Bank of Canada head 'encouraged' by Ottawa's efforts to diversify economy