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MPs approve $21B in additional government spending during 11th hour vote

A woman in a black blazer and white shirt gestures with her hand as she speaks in the House of Commons.
Government House leader Karina Gould rises during question period on Sept. 26, in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

MPs have voted to approve an additional $21.6 billion in government spending.

The money, which is supplementary to this year’s federal budget, will fund various programs including First Nations child services, dental care and compensation to Quebec for services to asylum seekers.

Conservative MPs did not support the additional spending in a vote tonight in the House of Commons.

But there had been uncertainty over whether the vote would even happen before Tuesday’s deadline.

Parliament has been paralyzed for months as the Conservatives continue to press the Liberals to hand over documents relating to hundreds of millions of dollars of misspending on a green-tech fund.

The issue is the focus of an ongoing privilege debate, which the Conservatives have pledged to keep going until they get what they want.

Privilege matters take precedence over nearly all other House affairs, so government business has been almost entirely stalled.

In a ruling last week citing House of Commons rules and procedures, Speaker Greg Fergus said he would exercise his authority to pause the privilege debate so that the vote on government spending can proceed.

Fergus also ruled that the remaining opposition day motions could be introduced before their Dec. 10 deadline as well.

A man in black robes stands in the House of Commons.
Speaker of the House of Commons Greg Fergus stands during question period on May 1. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The Conservatives introduced a motion focused on fentanyl for their final opposition day of the year.

The text of the motion called for the government to reverse Bill C-5 that repealed mandatory minimum sentences, ban the importation of fentanyl precursors, increase resources at ports to search for fentanyl and its precursors and stop buying “unsafe supply” opioids.

“Unsafe supply” is a term Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has used to describe the government’s safer supply programs aimed at reducing opioid overdoses. The Conservatives have repeatedly pushed the issue of drug diversion from these centres.

This motion, and another Conservative motion to remove the GST on new homes valued at under $1 million, were both defeated on Tuesday afternoon.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tues. Dec. 3, 2024.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during question period on Dec. 3. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

The Conservatives previously signalled they would force non-confidence votes with all of their opposition motions, but neither of these motions contain that language.

Supplementary estimates have to be voted on by Dec. 10, or the government won’t have authority to spend additional money.

Among other requests in the supplementary estimates is $561 million for the Department of National Defence for its Canadian multi-mission aircraft project.

“This funding is needed now for quarterly payment under the delivery plan we have with the United States government for the acquisition of up to 16 P-8A Poseidon aircraft,” a Defence Department spokesperson said in a statement.

The P-8A Poseidons are to replace Canada’s current maritime patrol aircraft, the CP-140 Aurora, which have been in service for more than 40 years.

“We are expecting first delivery of the aircraft in 2026,” a department spokesperson said.

The First Nations child and family services program request is for $955.2 million, which Indigenous Services Canada says is “to ensure continued compliance with Canadian Human Rights Tribunal orders and allow the continued delivery of supports.”

The money for the Quebec asylum seekers is a $581.3 million request through Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

All three departments said none of those requests are for money which already has been spent. If the funds aren’t approved, the Immigration Department said it might look to dip into government contingency funds to repay the province, while the Defence Department said it could encounter problems meeting contractual obligations and keeping the projects on track.

There’s additional money for the government’s new dental care program — $317 million, which was a condition of the now-defunct governance agreement between the Liberals and NDP.






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