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Poilievre says Conservatives will table thousands of amendments to keep Parliament sitting over Christmas

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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Wednesday his MPs will pitch “thousands of amendments” to legislation to keep Parliament sitting over Christmas if the Liberal government doesn’t scrap parts of its carbon tax.

“You will have no rest until the tax is gone,” Poilievre said in a message to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Liberal MPs.

The party maintains it will carry out its obstruction tactics until the Liberals lift the tax on all home-heating energy sources, pass a bill to grant carbon tax relief to some farmers and exempt all First Nations from the carbon levy, as some chiefs have demanded.

The Conservatives say they will demand 135 votes tomorrow on the government’s estimates, a procedural brawl over spending that could take more than 24 hours.

The party also says its MPs will introduce 20,000 amendments to the “sustainable jobs” bill, C-50, currently before the natural resources committee.

Other delaying tactics are planned for the coming days, a spokesperson for Poilievre said.

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These manoeuvres could force the government to extend the Commons sitting time beyond Dec. 15 — the day it was set to rise for the Christmas break.

“I’ve got news for Justin Trudeau,” Poilievre said in a morning address to the Conservative caucus. “You’ve ruined Christmas for Canadians. Common-sense Conservatives are going to ruin your vacation as well. We’re going to put in thousands of amendments at committee and in the House of Commons, forcing all-night, round-the-clock voting to block your $20 billion of inflationary spending and your economically destructive plans until you agree to our demand: take the tax off farmers, First Nations and families.”

That’s a threat to hold up the government’s fall economic statement, which calls for $20.8 billion more in spending over the next six years.

The commitment to derail Parliament comes after senators appointed by Trudeau amended part of a Conservative private member’s bill, C-234, that would have delivered a carbon tax carve-out to some farmers.

Trudeau ‘will have no rest’ until carbon tax is gone, Poilievre says

 

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre vows to delay the holiday break for the House of Commons over the carbon tax, saying he’s ready to force round-the-clock votes on scores of amendments until the Liberals act.

Progressive Sen. Pierre Dalphond’s amendment, passed by a 40-39 vote, keeps the carbon tax exemption for grain drying but deletes the section that provided tax relief for heating barns and greenhouses.

The Tory bill deals with natural gas and propane — other farm fuels like diesel and gasoline are already exempt under the Liberal tax regime. Farmers are also eligible for a carbon rebate.

In a statement sent to CBC News, Dalphond said he pushed for this change because “alternatives and efficiencies are readily available to reduce emissions related to heating and cooling of farm buildings, as compared to grain drying.”

The Progressive Senate Group includes a former Liberal senator and more recent Trudeau appointees.

Most of the votes to amend the bill came from the Independent Senators Group (ISG), which is largely made up of Trudeau-appointed senators.

Poilievre alleged that Trudeau lobbied his Senate picks to pass the amendment, which threatens the bill’s future.

When asked if Trudeau spoke to senators about the amendment, a spokesperson for the Prime Minister’s Office pointed to the actions of Conservative senators.

“It is shameful and unbecoming that Conservative parliamentarians have tried to intimidate and bully senators into their ideological, anti-climate agenda. The prime minister engaged in no such behaviour,” Jenna Ghassabeh said.

Conservative senators have been accused of bullying Independent senators over the bill.

Two Tory senators posted online the office phone numbers and email addresses of some members of the Red Chamber who have been accused of holding up the bill. The Senate Speaker admonished this behaviour in a Tuesday ruling.

Police and security officials are now investigating reports of racist threats directed at Sen. Bernadette Clement, a Black, Trudeau-appointed senator from eastern Ontario who moved to pause debate on the bill last month.

A senior government official speaking to CBC News on background did say that the prime minister “does not shy away from discussing matters affecting Canadians with fellow parliamentarians.”

The legislation has already passed the House of Commons, but Conservatives, farmers and their lobbyists fear if a Senate-amended bill is sent back to the Commons, it’ll languish and die on the order paper or be defeated under Liberal pressure.

Under parliamentary rules, Senate amendments must go back to the Commons before a bill can become law.

In question period, Trudeau said Conservatives have been “intimidating” and “threatening” parliamentarians to get them to back C-234.

 

Trudeau says Poilievre ‘pulling stunts’ with threat of delays

 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre is playing games with threats of amendments to delay business in the House of Commons, while he added that Liberals are “here to work.”

“The only farming the Conservative Party cares about is rage farming,” Trudeau said. “All of this was just an attempt to fundraise on the backs of farmers.”

In a reference to the Conservative leader’s vehement opposition to some federal climate policies, Trudeau said Poilievre wants to take Canada “back to the stone age” by dismantling the carbon tax.

As for the threat to indefinitely hold up parliamentary proceedings, Trudeau said Poilievre “can make us work late. We’re happy to do it. We’re doing important things for Canadians while he’s pulling stunts.”

House Leader calls ultimatum ‘completely irresponsible’

Government House Leader Karina Gould said Poilievre’s actions are “completely irresponsible.”

“What Mr. Poilievre is doing right now is not leadership,” she said. “It will affect Canadians, because what he is doing is putting thousands of amendments on notice for things like the sustainable jobs act — that’s an 11-page bill. His party has put almost 20,000 amendments on there. He is not in a serious position. He is reckless.”

Gould called Poilievre a “bully.”

 

Gould calls Poilievre a ‘bully’ for threats to delay bills

 

Liberal MP and Government House Leader Karina Gould says Pierre Poilievre is “not a serious politician” for threatening to hold up business in the House of Commons, calling Conservative amendments “jokes”.

“Canadians should see him for who he is. This is not about responsible leadership, this is about playing games. Because at the end of the day, politics is a game for him and it’s about his own personal aggrandizement.”

Conservative MP Ben Lobb, who introduced C-234, said he was “disappointed for Canadian farmers” that the amendment passed and the legislation now faces an uncertain future.

“We were so close to a good result,” Lobb said.

An MP from rural Ontario, Lobb said a pork farmer in his riding recently received a natural gas bill for $4,300 — $3,300 of that charge was to cover the carbon tax.

“Obviously that’s not fair. Commodity farming is a low-margin business and every little bit helps and this would have been a great help for them,” Lobb said.

Lobb suggested it was Trudeau’s more recent appointees who got the amendment through.

The prime minister named five new senators, including former Liberal MP Rodger Cuzner, to the Red Chamber on Oct. 31.

Four of them voted last night to back Dalphond’s amendment to delete the carveout for heating farmers’ barns.

“You take those five out and the amendment would have failed last night,” Lobb said.

The Senate is also dealing with persistent attendance issues.

A sizeable number of senators are consistently absent from the chamber.

Of the 94 sitting senators, 15 did not cast a vote on the amendment last night.

 

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In the news today: Canadians watch as Americans head to the polls

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Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed…

Canadians watch as Americans head to the polls

Millions of Americans are heading to the polls Tuesday as a chaotic presidential campaign reaches its peak in a deeply divided United States, where voters in only a handful of battleground states will choose the country’s path forward.

Vice-President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump have presented starkly different visions for America’s future, but polling shows the two remain in a dead heat.

Canada’s ambassador to the United States Kirsten Hillman has been travelling across America meeting with key members of the Republican and Democratic teams to prepare for any outcome. On election night, after her embassy duties are finished, she’ll be watching the results with her husband and friends,

A shared history and 8,891-kilometre border will not shield Canada from the election’s outcome. Both candidates have proposed protectionist policies, but experts warn if the Republican leader prevails the relationship between the neighbours could be much more difficult.

A cause for concern in Canada and around the world is Trump’s proposed 10 per cent across-the-board tariff. A Canadian Chamber of Commerce report suggests those tariffs would shrink the Canadian economy, resulting in around $30 billion per year in economic costs.

Here’s what else we’re watching…

5 things for Canadians to watch in U.S. election

Americans are facing a decision about the future of their country and no matter which president they choose, Canada cannot escape the pull of political polarization from its closest neighbour.

Vice-President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump present starkly different paths forward for the United States and the race for the White House appears to be extremely close.

The U.S. is Canada’s largest trading partner and its next president will be in charge during the review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico agreement in 2026.

Harris has campaigned on the fact that she voted against the trilateral agreement, saying it didn’t do enough to protect American workers or the environment. The vice-president is largely expected to maintain President Joe Biden’s Buy American procurement rules.

The centrepiece of Trump’s agenda is a proposed 10 per cent across-the-board tariff.

B.C. ports shuttered as lockout takes hold

One of Canada’s most vital trade arteries is cut off as employers at most of British Columbia’s ports lock out their workers in a dispute involving about 700 unionized foremen.

The BC Maritime Employers Association says it defensively locked out members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 after the union began strike activity yesterday.

However, union president Frank Morena says the employers grossly overreacted to the union’s original plan for an overtime ban, adding that its negotiators are ready to re-engage in talks at any time.

Canadian political and business leaders have expressed concern with another work stoppage at the ports, after job action from the big railways earlier this year and a 13-day strike in a separate labour dispute last year.

The Greater Vancouver Board of Trade says it is relaunching its Port Shutdown Calculator, a tool to illustrate the economic damage caused by the labour dispute and introduced during the job action last year.

UN refugee chief: cutback wise amid housing crisis

The head of the United Nations refugee agency says it is wise of Canada to scale back the number of new refugees it plans to resettle if that helps stabilize the housing market and prevents backlash against newcomers.

Filippo Grandi, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, met with the prime minister in Ottawa on Monday.

His visit comes a little more than a week after the federal government announced plans to cut overall immigration levels by 20 per cent for 2025 — a cut that includes refugees and protected persons.

The move has drawn condemnation from migrant groups, including the Canadian Council for Refugees, who called the new plan dangerous and a betrayal.

Grandi says Canada remains a global leader in resettlement, but says that pro-refugee sentiment is fragile in an economic or housing crisis and it would be “really negative” to see it destroyed.

N.S. memorial honours service of eight brothers

A new memorial recently dedicated in a small Nova Scotia community honours eight brothers whose story of service in the Second World War had been all but lost to local memory.

The Harvie brothers from Gormanville, N.S., all served in Europe — six returned home, while two died and are buried overseas.

A black granite monument is now inscribed with the names and photos of Avard, Burrell, Edmund, Ernest, Ervin, Garnet, Marven and Victor Harvie. It stands in a small memorial park just up the road from their hometown, beside the Royal Canadian Legion branch in Noel, N.S.

The number eight is inscribed prominently in the middle of the memorial.

The monument in the town about 70 kilometres north of Halifax is the brainchild of legion president Jeff Thurber, who only became aware of the Harvie brothers’ remarkable story around the time of his branch’s Remembrance Day service last year. That was when he happened to see them mentioned in a memorial book kept by the legion.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.



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Demonstration outside Brampton Hindu temple broken up after weapons spotted: police

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A Hindu temple in Brampton, Ont., where violence erupted over the weekend was the site of another demonstration on Monday night that police broke up after they say weapons were spotted in the crowd.

Peel Regional Police said in social-media updates that the demonstration was declared an unlawful assembly shortly before 10 p.m., after officers saw weapons “within the demonstration.”

Police say the demonstration converged at an intersection outside the Hindu Sabha Mandir temple, shutting down traffic along Gore Road in both directions, before crowds dispersed by 1 a.m.

Pro-Hindu groups who shared details of Monday’s demonstration suggested it came in response to Sikh separatists who protested a visit by Indian consular officials to the temple on Sunday.

Three people were arrested and a Peel police officer was suspended after Sunday’s protest, with social-media videos seeming to show fist fights and people striking each other with poles on what appeared to be grounds of the temple.

In response to Monday’s demonstration, Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown shared a video of a man he accused of trying to “direct violence against those of Sikh faith.”

“Agitators trying to incite violence need to be dealt with promptly and swiftly with the full extent of our hate laws,” Brown said in a Tuesday morning post on X.

The Canadian Press has not independently verified the contents of the video posts on social media.

Before Monday’s demonstration, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had condemned Sunday’s violence as a deliberate attack on a Hindu temple and an attempt to intimidate diplomats.

Canada expelled six Indian diplomats last month for allegations that they used their positions to collect information on Canadians in the Sikh separatist movement, and then passed the details on to criminal gangs who targeted the individuals directly.

India, which has rejected those allegations, has long accused Canada of harbouring terrorists involved in a Sikh separatist movement calling for an independent country called Khalistan. Canadian officials have said related extradition requests from India often lack adequate proof.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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B.C. ports shuttered as lockout takes hold in latest labour dispute

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VANCOUVER – One of Canada’s most vital trade arteries is cut off as employers at most of British Columbia’s ports lock out their workers in a dispute involving about 700 unionized foremen.

The BC Maritime Employers Association says it defensively locked out members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 after the union began strike activity yesterday.

However, union president Frank Morena says the employers grossly overreacted to the union’s original plan for an overtime ban, adding that its negotiators are ready to re-engage in talks at any time.

Canadian political and business leaders have expressed concern with another work stoppage at the ports, after job action from the big railways earlier this year and a 13-day strike in a separate labour dispute last year.

The Greater Vancouver Board of Trade says it is relaunching its Port Shutdown Calculator, a tool to illustrate the economic damage caused by the labour dispute and introduced during the job action last year.

Board president Bridgitte Anderson says the latest port shutdown will disrupt $800 million worth of goods daily, with every hour of the closure fuelling inflation.

“This shutdown is the latest in a long line of highly damaging labour disputes that have hurt Canada’s economy and international reputation,” Anderson says.

“Through the Port Shutdown Calculator, we want to demonstrate the profound and escalating impact of this labour dispute.”

The employers and the workers represented by Local 514 have been without a contract since March 2023.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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