Kevin O’Leary is focused on leadership campaign and will decide where to run after the campaign is over, says press secretary Ari Laskin.
The filibuster at the Procedure and House Affairs Committee continued Tuesday morning, as the opposition continues to resist the government's proposed study and changes to the Standing Orders. By the end of last week, the committee had reached roughly the 60-hour-mark of the standoff. The Hill Times photograph by Jake Wright
Former MP Paul Szabo say his party 'should have known that that was going to be the reaction.'
House leaders are discussing how to proceed with proposed changes to the Standing Orders, the rules that govern MPs and how the House of Commons is run.
Debate on the federal budget resumes in the House this week, with legislation to follow. Meanwhile, opposition MPs appear unrelenting in the face of the Government’s proposed Standing Order changes.
Conservative MPs called for the Treasury Board president to explain the delay on access to information reform to the House Ethics Committee, but were voted down by the committee's Liberal majority.
'It’s so important that you’ve got the NDP and the Conservatives arm in arm, singing Kumbaya, and nothing right now is going to phase us from continuing this fight,' says the NDP's David Christopherson.
Members of the Procedure and House Affairs Committee are in the in midst of a filibuster spurred by the opposition and prolonged by the government over voting on the Liberal motion to expedite the study on changes to the House rules.
A month after M-103 was first debated in the House setting off a storm of reaction across the country, police are still patrolling her Mississauga-Erin Mills riding office, but Liberal MP Iqra Khalid is trying to focus on the positive responses she's received too. The motion is scheduled for a second hour of debate on March 21 and will likely pass shortly after.
‘I don’t think Canada’s seen the development of a regulated industry like this in a very long time. I don’t even know what the comparison would be,’ says Edelman’s Christopher Vivone.
His predecessors have also been heavily lobbied, but Innovation Minster Bains ‘has even broader responsibilities than past Industry ministers,’ says lobbyist.
But the government was praised for programs to help indigenous and older Canadians attain post-secondary education, and for measures to bolster innovation-based industries.
‘The first thing you realize is that she actually understands the issues,’ says HealthCareCAN’s Bill Tholl on Health Minister Jane Philpott, who is a physician.
Lobbyists take note: when a passionate case for public interest gains momentum, if this is not a strong consideration in your talks with Parliamentarians, no amount of diligence and strategizing can counter it.
PUBLISHED : Wednesday, April 5, 2017 8:45 AM
The Hill Times' Chelsea Nash interviews China's new ambassador to Canada, Lu Shaye, who said he does not believe that factors like human rights should be considered when negotiating a free trade deal. “I think it’s an insult to democracy and human rights to take them into negotiations. If so, people will ask how much democracy and human rights cost,” he said, speaking through a translator on April 3. The Hill Times photograph by Sam Garcia.
PUBLISHED : Monday, April 10, 2017 12:10 PM
PUBLISHED : Monday, April 10, 2017 10:59 AM
PUBLISHED : Wednesday, April 5, 2017 4:30 AM
PUBLISHED : Monday, Jan. 11, 2016 9:39 PM
PUBLISHED : Thursday, Nov. 26, 2015 2:09 PM
Canada’s Shaw Festival is set to co-produce a new production of 1979 by Michael Healey with Ottawa’s Great Canadian Theatre Company. The play takes us back to the eve of prime minister Joe Clark’s minority government’s defeat in a non-confidence motion. It’s a fast-paced satire incorporating political heavyweights and influencers of the era. The production will rehearse at Shaw Festival, premiere in Ottawa at GCTC and tour back to Shaw as part of its 2017 season. The Ottawa component will run from April 11 to 30, 2017. Tickets for Ottawa’s production on sale: 613-236-5196 or gctc.ca.
CEOs representing Canada’s life and health insurance industry will be in Ottawa to meet with Parliamentarians about issues of importance to Canadians, such as access to affordable prescription drugs, investing in Canada’s infrastructure and international trade. For more information, contact Susan Murray (smurray@clhia.ca).
The bank is expected to make its latest interest rate announcement as well as publish its quarterly Monetary Policy Report. 10 a.m.
The Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians’ 12th annual Douglas C. Frith Dinner will take place on Wednesday, April 12 in the ballroom of the Fairmont Château Laurier hotel from 6 to 9:30 p.m. The guest speaker, Pierre Pettigrew, will speak about “The future of Globalization and Canada’s Place in the Emerging World Order.” For additional information, please call the CAFP office at 613-947-1690.