Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Parliament must be given more time to study COVID-19 response: Scheer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 May, 2020 05:59 PM
  • Parliament must be given more time to study COVID-19 response: Scheer

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says as provinces begin to ease up on COVID-19 restrictions, Parliament should also return to a more normal routine.
A modified House of Commons is currently in session with MPs meeting three times a week, twice virtually and once in person, in the form of a special COVID-19 committee.

But to pass legislation, the House of Commons must be properly recalled, as it now has been multiple times for response bills. In each case, the bill was passed in a matter of hours and Scheer said that process is no longer sufficient.

Scheer pointed out that the opposition parties have repeatedly shown that their oversight has provided better programs for Canadians. They have, in the past, forced the government to expand eligibility for benefit programs, for example.

If the House were meeting regularly — the Tories had proposed in-person sessions three or four times a week — then legislation could be given proper study, Scheer said. "Instead of being transparent, the Liberals continue to operate behind the scenes, forcing opposition parties to agree to artificial government timelines or risk being accused of blocking support payments," he said. "Those days are over."

In addition to the special COVID-19 committee, a variety of House of Commons committees are meeting regularly to debate specific elements around the management of the pandemic and the government response.

Among them is a committee charged with exploring the transition to a fully virtual Parliament and what that will take.

The committee on procedure and House affairs is supposed to report back with ideas for how to achieve that by the middle of this month. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton

Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton
The Al Soufi family was forced to close its Toronto restaurant earlier this month after they said they received hundreds of death threats over their son Alaa Al Soufi's participation in the rally.

Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton

Alberta Finance Minister Says First Budget To Attack Spending, Not Services

EDMONTON - Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews says the first budget of the new United Conservative government will surgically attack spending but not at the expense of essential services.    

Alberta Finance Minister Says First Budget To Attack Spending, Not Services

Everything Is Interrelated:' Scientists Write Family Tree For Tree Of Life

"Everything is interrelated," said the University of Alberta's Gane Wong, one of the paper's dozens of co-authors.

Everything Is Interrelated:' Scientists Write Family Tree For Tree Of Life

Police Investigate After Montreal Man, Two Children Found Dead In Apparent Murder Suicide

Montreal police are investigating the discovery of the bodies of two children and their father as an apparent double murder followed by a suicide.

Police Investigate After Montreal Man, Two Children Found Dead In Apparent Murder Suicide

Closing Arguments: Crown Says Accused In Edmonton Attack Meant To Cause Chaos

EDMONTON - A Crown prosecutor says a man accused of stabbing an Edmonton police officer and striking four pedestrians with a van went to extraordinary lengths to cause as much "chaos, destruction and indiscriminate death" as possible.

Closing Arguments: Crown Says Accused In Edmonton Attack Meant To Cause Chaos

Jody Wilson-Raybould Should Use Social Media To Amplify Her Voice: Experts

VANCOUVER - In the early years of Confederation, there were members of Parliament known as "loose fish," who floated free from parties but swam back and forth between allegiances.    

Jody Wilson-Raybould Should Use Social Media To Amplify Her Voice: Experts