
Liberals under fire for rushing bill through Parliament to speed up resource projects
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government is coming under fire for seeking to rush through a major piece of legislation that grants cabinet sweeping powers to quickly approve major projects.
Government House leader Steven MacKinnon put a motion on notice Thursday that would push Bill C-5 through the House of Commons by the end of next week — leaving just two days to hear from civil society groups, stakeholders and experts.
Critics charge the move is anti-democratic. In a fiery exchange in question period, Bloc Québécois House leader Christine Normandin accused Prime Minister Mark Carney of trying to “steamroll” a bill through the House that would greatly expand his own powers.
“The prime minister has no right to impose C-5 under closure when the bill gives him exceptional powers unlike anything that we’ve seen before,” she said in French. “Is that the prime minister’s intention, to bypass Parliament and govern by decree like Donald Trump?”