
259 stances tracked · 7 shifts
Voting Yea means supporting a temporary, targeted increase to the GST/HST credit to provide immediate cost-of-living relief to eligible low- and modest-income individuals and families by increasing refundable tax credit payments for the 2022–2023 benefit year.
Voting Yea means supporting a statutory increase in GST/HST credit amounts and the creation of deemed-payment mechanisms to deliver larger and periodic GSTC transfers to eligible low- and modest-income individuals and families (including shared-custody parent adjustments).
Voting Yea means supporting passage of the appropriation so the federal government can legally spend the sums listed in the Supplementary Estimates (B) for FY 2024–25 and ensure departmental operations and reimbursements are funded.
Voting Yea means approving the government's supplementary appropriations and allowing the outlined federal spending for 2025–26 to proceed.
Voting Yea means supporting the government’s authorization to spend the supplementary funds and to finalize the 2022–23 federal budgetary adjustments.
Voting Yea means supporting the parliamentary approval of the supplementary appropriations and enabling the government to spend the specified $20.48B on the listed federal programs and obligations for 2023–24.
Voting Yea means supporting formal authorization of the supplementary appropriations and enabling the federal government to legally spend the listed amounts for 2022–23 as set out in the Supplementary Estimates (A).
Voting Yea means supporting increased federal spending/transfers to provide targeted cost-of-living relief through larger and advance GSTC payments, accepting the fiscal cost to deliver near-term support.
Support government spending package for 2026
Voting Yea means supporting legal protection for Canada's supply management import controls — preventing increases in tariff rate quotas or reductions in over‑quota tariffs for dairy, poultry and eggs to preserve domestic producer protection.
Voting Yea means endorsing the specific spending choices and departmental allocations set out in the Supplementary Estimates (B), allowing those priorities to be funded.
Support government spending package for 2024
Support authority for Schedule 2 multi-year charging and ordering provisions
Support regional economic development funding for Atlantic Canada under the Act
Support appropriations to maintain tax administration and compliance capacity
Support funding for federal employment and benefit programs administered by ESDC
Voting Yea means endorsing the government's specified allocation of supplementary funds and the spending priorities identified in the schedule.
Support clarifying appropriation and funding mechanics for the Commission
Support transitional arrangements to transfer staff and functions smoothly
Support allowing governments to fund regulator expenses for requested work
Support establishing a revenues regime to capture value from submerged land licences
Support expanding worker safety protections to offshore renewable energy workers
Support government spending package for 2023
Voting Yea means supporting measures that strengthen unions' bargaining power and strike effectiveness by banning many forms of replacement labour, enforcing timely dispute resolution, and protecting reinstatement rights.
Voting Yea means supporting tougher enforcement and deterrence to protect workers' rights during strikes/lockouts, including high fines and administrative penalties to discourage use of replacement labour and ensure reinstatement.
Voting Yea supports allocating federal funds to implement a statutory framework for a fair net-zero transition including administrative bodies and programmatic supports.
Voting Yea endorses explicit inclusion of unions and collective representation in transition planning and advisory structures.
Voting Yea favors government-led, planned efforts to promote job creation tied to the low-carbon transition.
Voting Yea supports legislated attention to protecting workers from adverse impacts of decarbonization and providing transition assistance.
Support government spending package for 2025
Voting Yea means supporting legislative tariff and customs changes necessary to implement the FTA and facilitate preferential trade between Canada and Ukraine.
Voting Yea means supporting the appropriation and payment of Canada's share of institutional and administrative costs arising from implementing the FTA.
Voting Yea means supporting a temporary tax incentive to encourage construction of purpose-built rental housing by enhancing the GST rebate, with the aim of increasing rental supply and improving housing affordability.
Voting Yea means supporting a package of fiscal and regulatory actions intended to reduce household costs by stimulating rental supply and curbing anti-competitive/excessive pricing in essential markets.
Voting Yea means supporting stronger competition enforcement tools to prevent excessive and unfair selling prices, intended to protect consumers and address affordability pressures in essential markets (e.g., groceries).
Support funding to ensure CRA can administer and enforce income tax laws.
Support funding for regional economic development and job-creation programs in Atlantic Canada.
Support appropriations enabling delivery of employment supports and benefits.
Voting Yea means supporting targeted supplementary spending to support federal housing measures administered through CMHC, enabling reimbursements and program expenditures identified in the Supplementary Estimates.
Voting Yea means supporting the federal prioritization of ongoing public spending to create and sustain a Canada-wide early learning and child care system and the use of federal funds to achieve accessibility, affordability and quality targets.
Voting Yea means supporting federal policy that prioritizes improving labor conditions, recruitment and retention in the early childhood education workforce as part of child care reform.
Support government spending package for 2023
Supports central oversight by Treasury Board for official-languages policy and compliance
Supports public reporting and employee information on language compliance
Supports statutory language protections for employees and consumers in federally regulated private businesses
Supports establishing complaint and referral mechanisms for workplace language rights
Supports statutory protections for workers who exercise language rights and measures to foster French
Voting Nay means opposing the creation of a targeted tax deduction on grounds that it reduces federal revenue, creates a tax preference for a specific occupational group, may add administrative complexity or be open to misuse, and that employer responsibility or other tax provisions should address the issue.
Voting Nay means opposing using the tax code as a mechanism for worker protection in this instance, arguing that employer responsibility, collective bargaining, or direct labour standards would be the appropriate mechanisms, and that this approach may unevenly benefit specific worker groups.
Voting Yea means supporting the accompanying tax-law changes needed to integrate the Canada disability benefit into the federal tax and transfer framework.
Voting Yea means supporting the creation of a new federal spending program to reduce poverty among working-age persons with disabilities and backing federal prioritization of income supports and related administrative arrangements.
Voting Yea means supporting stronger public mechanisms to resolve commercial disputes between platforms and news organizations to ensure fair outcomes and protect domestic news markets.
Voting Yea means supporting a law that creates a formal bargaining framework to rebalance bargaining power between large digital platforms and news organizations, seeks to secure payment/terms for news content and to sustain Canadian journalism.
Support enhanced reporting to reduce tax avoidance via trusts
Support imposing a temporary surcharge on very large financial groups to recoup excess profits
Support targeted tax credit to boost critical mineral exploration in Canada
Support treating short-term housing dispositions as business income to limit quick speculative gains
Support new tax-advantaged vehicle to help first-time homebuyers save
Support enabling government capitalization and governance for Canada Growth Fund
Support eliminating interest accrual for students and apprentices to reduce borrower burdens
Voting Yea means supporting the government's allocation of additional funds to cover departmental and program expenses set out in the Supplementary Estimates (B) for 2022–23.
Voting Yea means supporting federal action to create jobs and training opportunities tied to green-economy projects in the Prairies.
Voting Yea means supporting stronger legal protection for pension plan beneficiaries and retirees by prioritizing payment of unfunded pension liabilities and requiring transparency on plan solvency; it favors shifting some financial risks back onto employers/insolvency estates and increasing oversight of pension funding.
Voting Yea means approving the enabling tax-law changes needed to implement the benefits and their administration under existing federal tax/excise frameworks.
Voting Yea means supporting direct, targeted federal assistance to reduce household rental cost pressures as a response to rising cost of living.
Voting Yea means supporting a targeted cash-transfer-style response to ease immediate cost-of-living pressures for vulnerable households.
Voting Yea means supporting measures that align artists' labour protections and bargaining frameworks with the updated broadcasting/streaming environment, potentially strengthening creators' negotiating position and access to remuneration.
Support government spending package for 2022
Support providing the agency with the appropriated operating funds and authority to make recoverable CPP/EI expenditures for 2022–23
Support expanding tax relief for northern residents by increasing optional travel expense claims
Support compensating farming businesses in backstop jurisdictions for fuel charge impacts via a refundable credit
Support providing direct financial support to businesses for ventilation upgrades via a refundable tax credit
Support capping the recovery period for CEBA loan amounts, providing certainty for borrowers and administrators
Support clarifying and limiting EI benefit durations for certain seasonal workers to adjust program parameters
Voting Yea means endorsing the specific spending priorities and allocations to the named departments and Crown corporations, allowing these programs and payments to proceed.
Support continued federal wage subsidy to help employers retain employees through May 7, 2022.
Support granting the government limited regulatory flexibility to extend supports until July 2, 2022.
Support independent audit and parliamentary reporting to improve program accountability and effectiveness.
Support aligning budget implementation law with newly enacted labour protections and expenditures.
Support adding statutory leave to protect workers unable to work for COVID-related health reasons.
Support creation of a federal lockdown-specific income support for affected workers.
McGuinty supports strengthening transatlantic/NATO defence cooperation and Arctic security, evidenced by his signing of a Canada–Denmark memorandum of understanding to deepen defence innovation, logistics, training, exercises and industrial cooperation between NATO allies.
McGuinty supports strengthening Canada–Denmark defence cooperation and reinforcing transatlantic/NATO security through concrete measures (signing an MOU). He emphasizes protecting Arctic sovereignty and committing Canada and allies to keep the Arctic secure, and to deepen logistics, training and industrial cooperation.
McGuinty supports Canada joining the EU SAFE joint procurement program, saying it lets Canadian firms supply ammunition, missiles, drones and other systems, will catalyze massive private investment, and that cost and percentage details are still being negotiated.
David McGuinty supports Canada joining the EU's SAFE program, saying it strengthens collective security, supports development of key defence capabilities, and gives Canadian industry access to European defence markets while contributing to European and Ukrainian security.
David McGuinty’s position on defence procurement is that the government’s review of the F-35 purchase is ongoing, and he will not provide additional details—he has nothing further to say publicly at this stage.
He says the planned acquisition of 88 F-35 jets remains under review and that the government is evaluating security, sovereignty, interoperability, and industrial benefits across the country as part of deciding whether to proceed with the purchase.
David McGuinty advocated a 20% across-the-board pay increase for Canadian military personnel, calling for salaries for all ranks to be raised by twenty percent to help address recruitment, retention and the financial strain on lower-ranking service members.
McGuinty supports the federal pay increases for military personnel, saying the government is proud to provide the pay package Armed Forces members deserve and calling the boost long overdue, particularly benefiting lower-ranked members.
McGuinty acknowledges that “some” Canadian military personnel are deployed in the Middle East, insists they are “out of harm’s way,” states the Canadian Armed Forces were not involved in planning or executing the U.S. attack and that Canada was not given advance notice.
McGuinty says Canada should deepen bilateral relations with Australia through stronger economic ties and enhanced defence and security cooperation, welcoming Australia's new openness and endorsing middle-powers collaboration on the economy, defence, and security.
McGuinty says Canadian military personnel deployed in the Middle East are safe and "out of harm’s way", confirms CAF were not involved in the attack’s planning or execution, and that Canada supported the strikes while urging a diplomatic end to the conflict.
McGuinty says Canada should expand its defence industry and deepen defence relations internationally to improve collaboration — including on defence procurement — by using agreements that enable information exchange and industrial-security cooperation.
McGuinty supports increased military assistance and domestic defence production: he committed Canada to send 400 armoured vehicles to Ukraine, extend the Ukrainian training mission by three years, and pursue accelerated production of materiel under a defence industrial policy.
David McGuinty, as Defence Minister, announced the federal government will spend $3.7 billion to build 6,000 military housing units, arguing this investment strengthens Canadian Armed Forces readiness, supports recruitment, and improves members’ living conditions and sense of belonging.
David McGuinty supports a major expansion of military housing, advocating rapid construction of safe, modern, affordable homes to strengthen operational readiness, aid recruitment and retention, and provide stability for Canadian Armed Forces members and their families.
David McGuinty says procurement decisions will prioritize the needs of the Canadian Armed Forces and the best interests of Canadians, committing to procure what the air force requires while ensuring economic benefits for Canadians.
McGuinty affirmed Canada's solidarity with the U.S. and NATO in Afghanistan, praising Canadian forces' commitment and sacrifice, saying they stood 'side by side' with allies, are 'second to none', and that Canada will never forget their sacrifices.
David McGuinty pushed back against President Trump's claim that NATO allies avoided front-line fighting in Afghanistan, asserting in an official media statement that there was 'no standing back' and that allied forces stood 'side by side, together on the front lines.'
David McGuinty praised the Hartlen Point land-based test facility as an important step in the River-class destroyer project, saying it will play a vital role in bringing the new ships into service and preparing personnel to work with incoming ship systems.
He endorses the government's purchase of six Bombardier Global 6500 jets, arguing these modern aircraft will enhance operational flexibility and readiness and support Canada’s strategic air mobility both domestically and internationally.
David McGuinty expresses confidence that Canada will meet the NATO two-percent military spending benchmark by March 31, saying the government is closely monitoring defence spending and will ensure the additional funds are delivered on time.
McGuinty urges democracies to strengthen security partnerships and defend the rules-based international order, endorsing investment in Canada’s Armed Forces and collective action — saying democracies must 'step up' to reaffirm shared values and responsibility for a safer, more resilient, peaceful world.
McGuinty announced the contract with Armatec to refurbish light armoured vehicles has been nullified, declined to disclose the reasons for cancellation, and emphasized Canada has supplied — and continues to supply — brand-new armoured combat support vehicles to Ukraine.
McGuinty says Canada's military role in Ukraine, including any troop deployments, remains undecided — "to be resolved." He has emphasized equipment support, evidenced by touring a Ukrainian drone manufacturer while discussing the scope of arrangements.
Voting Yea means supporting the allocation of operating funds and commitment authorities necessary for DND to continue its operations and obligations.
Voting Yea means endorsing capital and procurement spending for DND, enabling acquisition and transfer of equipment and related defence projects.
Voting Yea means approving dedicated funding and authorities for CSE operations and cybersecurity work outlined in the Supplementary Estimates.
Voting Yea means supporting a legal limit on the government's ability to make trade negotiation concessions on supply‑managed products, signalling priority for domestic agricultural protections over negotiated market access.
Support allocating funds for Canada's military spending and operations
Support controlled mechanisms for Commission access to classified material with safeguards
Support creating legal framework to manage transboundary hydrocarbon fields under bilateral agreements
Voting Yea means supporting extra funding to maintain or enhance intelligence and security capabilities funded through CSIS.
Voting Yea means supporting formal parliamentary approval and domestic implementation of the Canada–Ukraine Free Trade Agreement to enable preferential market access and obligations under the FTA.
Voting Yea means supporting incorporation of FTA dispute settlement and arbitration procedures into domestic law so trade disputes with Ukraine can be resolved under the Agreement's mechanisms.
Voting Yea means supporting clearer and potentially stricter criteria for trade‑agreement investor status and tighter timing/notice rules to ensure trade partners’ investors are appropriately screened under Canada’s national security framework.
Voting Yea means supporting stronger legal frameworks for sharing and protecting sensitive information between Canadian authorities and foreign counterparts as part of investment screening and for empowering ministers to impose interim measures to protect national security.
Voting Yea means supporting a narrowly tailored exception that balances consumer repair needs with security by limiting circumvention to sole-purpose maintenance and excluding infringing acts, thereby enabling legitimate repair without wholesale removal of protections.
Voting Yea means supporting enhanced transparency and inter-jurisdictional information sharing to help detect and prevent terrorist financing and other security threats that exploit opaque corporate ownership.
Support funding to sustain border management and security operations.
Support appropriations sustaining foreign aid programs and diplomatic operations.
Voting Yea means supporting additional funding for airport security operations and capital needs, enabling CATSA to maintain and upgrade screening and other aviation security measures.
Voting Yea means supporting integration of international organization/sanctions compliance into domestic authorization processes to ensure adherence to UN obligations.
Voting Yea means supporting a framework that allows necessary activities in terrorist‑controlled areas while requiring security assessments to limit terrorism financing risks.
Voting Yea means supporting legally enabling humanitarian actors to deliver aid in difficult contexts while imposing conditions to reduce risk of benefiting terrorist groups.
Support new import restrictions to control ammunition and parts entry
Supports promoting both official languages in Canada’s diplomatic activities
Support increased capacity to provide international financial assistance under Bretton Woods instruments
Voting Yea means supporting regulatory frameworks that protect audience privacy while enabling the regulator to access data needed for enforcement, policy-making and competition oversight in the digital broadcasting sector.