Politics

MPs expected to extend sittings to midnight until House rises for the summer

Liberal House Leader Mark Holland says the Conservatives have deliberately obstructed the operation of the House of Commons, requiring MPs to now sit until midnight to get the Liberals’ legislative agenda passed before the end of the spring sitting.

Liberal House Leader Mark Holland says the Conservatives are obstructing bills

mark holland
Government House Leader Mark Holland says MPs will now have to sit until midnight to get legislation passed in time for the summer break. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Government House Leader Mark Holland says MPs will have to extend the daily business of the House of Commons until midnight each day in order to get the Liberals' legislative agenda passed before the end of the spring sitting.

Holland accused the opposition Conservatives of deliberately obstructing House operations.

"They are responsible," Holland told reporters in Ottawa Wednesday. "When one party creates a condition where they refuse to share information … they unilaterally, as a single party, hold up every other party's ability to do the business of the country." 

Holland said that since the fall, he has been reaching out to the Conservatives to ask how many speakers they have on a given bill, how much time they have to debate it and what's on their agenda. He said he's received silence in return.

"We have to effectively try to navigate the legislative session with blindfolds on," he said. 

"And so … we're sitting here every night until midnight and we're going to get the work of the nation done."

Holland said that while the Conservatives are expected to disagree with government legislation, that doesn't give them the right to withhold information as a "tactic or strategy of obstruction."

Holland said the government has a number of key bills it wants to see pass the House before it rises for the summer and "Canadians expect us to have a productive session and be able to finish it."

Conservative MP Andrew Scheer told reporters in the foyer of the House of Commons Wednesday that the Liberals are just upset with Conservatives' criticisms of their legislative agenda.

"The Liberals are trying to ram through their high spending, high cost, high inflation, high interest rate, high crime agenda through the House of Commons," Scheer said. 

"Conservatives are doing everything we can to highlight the … terrible consequences of their agenda and the damage it will inflict on Canadian families … So you're darn right. We are taking our time to highlight those deficiencies."

The Liberal legislative agenda

The government House leader said the Liberals want to see nine bills move through Parliament and one sent to committee before the summer break. The nine bills are:

  • The Budget Implementation Act, or C-47, which was tabled on March 28
  • Bill S-5, which updates the Canadian Environmental Protection Act
  • Bill C-42, which amends the Canada Business Corporations Act to make it easier to identify the beneficial owners of a company
  • Bill C-34, which amends the Investment Canada Act to allow ministers more time and authority to decide if foreign investments compromise national security
  • Bill S-8, which amends the Refugee Protection Act to ensure foreigners sanctioned under Canadian law are inadmissible to Canada
  • Bill C-18, which controversially seeks to make tech giants like Google compensate Canadian news organizations for content that appears on their platforms
  • Bill C-41, which amends anti-terrorist financing legislation to allow for the delivery of aid and immigration assistance in places controlled by terrorist groups, such as Afghanistan
  • Bill C-22, which establishes the Canada disability benefit for working-age Canadians
  • Bill C-35, which enshrines access to affordable child care in federal law and ensures the federal government provides long-term child care funding to provinces and Indigenous Peoples.

Holland also said that he would like to see Bill C-40 move on to the committee stage before summer. The legislation, also known as David and Joyce Milgaard's Law, would create an independent commission to review miscarriages of justice.

"It's aggressive but … these matters are essential to Canadians and I think they expect us to get work done and that's exactly what we will do," Holland said. 

He said that despite the volume of bills his government wants to see pass, he is confident the House can get it done.

"I wouldn't be here unless I felt confident that working with other parties ... that there's an agreement to bring them to a close," he said.