Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP Would Not Have Representation In Senate While Pushing For Abolition: Mulcair

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jul, 2015 01:48 PM
  • NDP Would Not Have Representation In Senate While Pushing For Abolition: Mulcair
WATERLOO, Ont. — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says even though his party has no representation in the Senate, he would not make any appointments while negotiating with provinces to abolish the chamber.
 
He made the remarks from a news conference in Waterloo, Ont., on Friday shortly before Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced a moratorium on Senate appointments during a separate event in Regina.
 
Mulcair called the Senate undemocratic, unaccountable and made up of Harper's "cronies." He said he will be seeking a mandate for abolishing the Senate in the coming election because Canadians "deserve better."
 
The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled getting rid of the Senate altogether would require unanimous provincial consent.
 
Harper has said unanimity "isn't going to happen," but echoed some of Mulcair's criticism when he announced the moratorium and said Canadians are not happy with an unelected, unaccountable upper house.
 
Harper has not made any appointments to the 105-seat Senate in the last 2 1/2 years and there are 22 vacancies.
 
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has booted senators from his party's caucus and is promising, if elected, to create an independent advisory body to recommend non-partisan nominees to the Senate.
 
Mulcair also faulted Trudeau on Friday for not standing up against the controversial anti-terror Bill C-51, after the Liberals supported it in the third reading vote held May 6.
 
"(Trudeau) said that, because this was an election year, he didn't want to vote against bill C-51 because he was afraid that Stephen Harper would make political hay out of it," Mulcair said.
 
"I'm not afraid of Stephen Harper."

MORE National ARTICLES

First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters

First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters
VICTORIA — A mining organization representing B.C. First Nations wants companies to bank roll an emergency fund that will cover the cost of disasters similar to last summer's Mount Polley tailings dam collapse.

First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters

Western Mothers Launch Appeal Asking Their Children Who Joined ISIL To Come Home

Western Mothers Launch Appeal Asking Their Children Who Joined ISIL To Come Home
BERLIN — A group of Western mothers whose children have joined the Islamic State group and other extremists in Syria and Iraq appealed Wednesday for them to return home, quoting from the Qur’an.

Western Mothers Launch Appeal Asking Their Children Who Joined ISIL To Come Home

Canada's Foreign Minister Expresses Strong Support For Israel During First Visit

JERUSALEM — Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson is in Israel on a visit to show what he calls Canada's "unwavering support" for the Jewish state.

Canada's Foreign Minister Expresses Strong Support For Israel During First Visit

12-Year-Old Boy Dies After Stabbing At Downtown Toronto Hotel

12-Year-Old Boy Dies After Stabbing At Downtown Toronto Hotel
Officers were called to reports of the stabbing at the Cambridge Suites Hotel in the city's financial district just before 6 a.m.

12-Year-Old Boy Dies After Stabbing At Downtown Toronto Hotel

Everything You Wanted To Know About Surrey Couple Found Guilty Of Plotting B.C. Legislature Bombing

Everything You Wanted To Know About Surrey Couple Found Guilty Of Plotting B.C. Legislature Bombing
Some things to know about John Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody from undercover videos shown to the jury. The pair, who were found guilty of terror-related charges, were recent converts to Islam:

Everything You Wanted To Know About Surrey Couple Found Guilty Of Plotting B.C. Legislature Bombing

Edmonton School Board Says It Shouldn't Have Asked For Bus Driver To Be Fired

Edmonton School Board Says It Shouldn't Have Asked For Bus Driver To Be Fired
Edmonton's Catholic school board is apologizing to a bus driver who kicked a student off his bus for unruly behaviour.

Edmonton School Board Says It Shouldn't Have Asked For Bus Driver To Be Fired