Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Tories challenge mandatory vaccine rule for MPs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2021 05:25 PM
  • Tories challenge mandatory vaccine rule for MPs

OTTAWA - Conservatives say all 338 members of Parliament should be able to vote on whether they must be fully vaccinated to enter the House of Commons.

Tory whip Blake Richards is asking the Commons Speaker, Anthony Rota, to rule that the the seven-member, multi-party body that governs the House does not have the authority to impose a vaccine mandate on all MPs.

He emphasizes that Conservatives believe in getting vaccinated against COVID-19 and that the shots are the best way to end the pandemic.

But he says they question the way in which the decision to impose a vaccine mandate was made.

Last month, the board of internal economy voted in a policy requiring those entering all buildings in the House of Commons precinct to provide proof of vaccination or have a medical exemption.

Richards says he and the other Conservative MP who were at that meeting abstained from the vote.

He says Tories believe the committee lacked the jurisdiction to make such a decision that carries "sweeping constitutional implications" because it affects MPs' access to Parliament.

He raised the issue as a point of privilege and says he wants to see all MPs decide on a "vaccination or test mandate" to enter the chamber and other parliamentary buildings.

"This is a balance that we can find, and a balance that we can strike," he argued in the Commons late Tuesday.

Rota took Richards' point under advisement and will rule on it at a later date.

The Conservatives' formal complaint against the vaccine policy is the latest chapter in their three-month struggle against mandatory vaccination in general, which first emerged as an issue during the September election campaign.

Leader Erin O'Toole refuses to say how many of his 118-MPs are double vaccinated against COVID-19 or how many have claimed medical exemptions, saying he respects their right to privacy.

He is the only federal leader to take that position, which has exposed him to attacks from the Liberals, as well as New Democrats, who accuse the Conservatives of wanting special treatment.

The other parties say all their MPs are fully vaccinated and support mandatory vaccination for admission to the Commons precinct.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau touts vaccine deals as COVID-19 cases soar

Trudeau touts vaccine deals as COVID-19 cases soar
Trudeau told a news conference Friday that the government is spending $214 million towards the development of COVID-19 vaccines, signing deals with two Canadian biotech firms.

Trudeau touts vaccine deals as COVID-19 cases soar

Canada, Alberta sign deal on caribou protection

Canada, Alberta sign deal on caribou protection
The plan envisions self-sustaining herds on healthy habitat some time between 50 and 100 years from now.

Canada, Alberta sign deal on caribou protection

Police probe death of Iranian-Canadian activist

Police probe death of Iranian-Canadian activist
York Regional Police have identified Mohammad Mehdi Amin Sadeghieh, 58, as the victim of a suspected homicide.

Police probe death of Iranian-Canadian activist

Canadians in U.S. mull options as election nears

Canadians in U.S. mull options as election nears
Ask some of the roughly 800,000 Canadians who live in the U.S., though, and it becomes one of three things: a parachute, a very real possibility or an honest-to-God plan of action.

Canadians in U.S. mull options as election nears

Hate-motivated graffiti at National War Memorial

Hate-motivated graffiti at National War Memorial
The alleged incident happened last Friday night, when police say a man used a sharp object to engrave a hateful message on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

Hate-motivated graffiti at National War Memorial

Government wants court to pause refugee ruling

Government wants court to pause refugee ruling
Federal lawyers are asking the Federal Court of Appeal to stay a July ruling that struck down the Safe Third Country Agreement but left it in effect until mid-January

Government wants court to pause refugee ruling