House of Commons Hansard #139 of the 45th Parliament, 1st session. (The original version is on Parliament's site.) The word of the day was c-30.

Topics

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Petitions

Spring Economic Update 2026 Implementation Act Report stage of Bill C-30. The bill, which implements the spring economic update, sparks debate over legislative programming tactics and economic management. Liberals defend the economic measures and youth-focused investments as vital, while the Conservatives argue the government mismanages taxpayer funds and stifles parliamentary debate. Meanwhile, the Bloc Québécois criticizes provisions regarding airport privatization, pesticide regulation, and the lack of consultation. 13300 words, 2 hours.

Business of the House Members unanimously adopt a government motion to expedite the passage of several legislative bills, including those related to national defence, self-government agreements, and financial crimes, while establishing the House's upcoming sitting schedule. 300 words.

Spring Economic Update 2026 Implementation Act Third reading of Bill C-30. The bill implements the 2026 spring economic update. NDP MP Jenny Kwan criticized the legislation, arguing that it fails to address housing insecurity and rising affordability pressures. Green Party MP Elizabeth May also voiced strong opposition, specifically condemning the reduction of pesticide regulation and the bill's omnibus nature. Despite these objections, the House passed the legislation at third reading. 9500 words, 2 hours.

Statements by Members

Question Period

The Conservatives condemn the Liberal recession, noting declining investment and high food bank usage. They blame government policy for plummeting homebuilding and rising housing costs. Additionally, they demand action on attacks by foreign regimes and criticize lenient sentences for non-citizens, while calling for tougher penalties for traffickers and protections for private property rights.
The Liberals emphasize their legislative productivity and G7 economic leadership. They highlight criminal justice reforms and stiffer penalties, including measures against coercive control. For affordability and growth, they tout increased housing starts, lower rent costs, and private property rights, alongside the national school food program.
The Bloc denounces the government's climate betrayal and pipeline agreements, while criticizing concessions to Trump that harm culture. They also condemn unsupported tariffs on Quebec and demand that nuclear decommissioning consultations be conducted in French.
The NDP demand clean drinking water for Indigenous communities and criticize the government's support for war in Iran.

Adjournment Debates

Youth employment and economic opportunities Garnett Genuis highlights a youth unemployment crisis, advocating for Conservative proposals like new jobs plans and parental leave reforms. Yasir Naqvi defends government initiatives, pointing to investments in Red Seal trades and the Canada summer jobs program, while emphasizing the need for collaborative support for young Canadians.
Family farm tax succession Jacob Mantle argues that current tax laws impede the intergenerational transfer of family farms to extended family members, contributing to farm closures. Ryan Turnbull acknowledges the challenge, suggesting that models like employee ownership trusts could offer potential solutions for business succession, though he stops short of proposing immediate legislative action.
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TaxationAdjournment Proceedings

3:30 p.m.

Whitby Ontario

Liberal

Ryan Turnbull LiberalParliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Finance and National Revenue and to the Secretary of State (Canada Revenue Agency and Financial Institutions)

Mr. Speaker, it is good to be here in the very last moments before the House rises for the summer.

I know that there are a large number of farms in the member opposite's riding. There are farm succession plans all across this country, and farmers do struggle with succession, so I understand the issue the member is speaking about.

We have done some things recently, in the spring economic update implementation act, on this front with capital gains exemption. It applies only to employee ownership trusts and worker co-operatives, but I think it highlights where the government is open to looking at options for succession to make it easier to hand down businesses. In this case, the one I am referencing is employee ownership trusts, which is a model I have advocated for.

Worker-owned co-operatives will get the same tax treatment. It is a measure I have supported from day one because it offers owners of businesses that are small- to medium-sized, or they could be larger, the opportunity, when they want to sell the business, to protect those businesses and also to hand them down to workers. This creates wealth-building opportunities for frontline workers in a grocery chain, for example.

There are many examples in the U.K. For example, Waitrose is a company run by John Lewis Partnership. It is a good example of how employee ownership trusts can create a shared equity model where frontline workers get to participate in the proceeds of the company. I think it is similar to a model that could be applied to farms in this country, although I do not know of any workup of the details on that at this point.

I thank the member for bringing this up. I think it is an important consideration.

TaxationAdjournment Proceedings

3:30 p.m.

Conservative

Jacob Mantle Conservative York—Durham, ON

Mr. Speaker, I look forward to hearing what the government proposes in the fall.

In the last minute I have, I would like to comment on the Speaker's ruling from yesterday. I appreciated the Speaker's ruling but I was deeply disappointed by it.

First, on a factual basis, the Speaker indicated in the ruling that there was only supposition that certain members of the government may have had privileged information about the timing of amendments. I would suggest to the Speaker that the fact that they submitted amendments is evidence enough that they had that information.

Second, the Speaker made this point:

“Both the minority and the majority have rights; however, primacy cannot be given to both.”

That was the quote the Speaker used. That was not the issue. The issue was the level playing field and primacy being given by the Speaker's ruling to the majority. I am troubled by the precedent that the Speaker's ruling may have set for giving the government the ability to deny members of the House, of any party, their participatory rights in the submission of amendments.

TaxationAdjournment Proceedings

3:35 p.m.

The Speaker Francis Scarpaleggia

I would refer the hon. member to Standing Order 10.

The hon. Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Finance has the floor.

TaxationAdjournment Proceedings

June 18th, 2026 / 3:35 p.m.

Liberal

Ryan Turnbull Liberal Whitby, ON

Mr. Speaker, I would just say that it has become apparent in the House, through question period and many of the proceedings, that the Conservatives claim that they are about protecting and supporting vulnerable people, but in fact, they just seem to use those people's hardship for political gain. They see them as a political opportunity, whether it is young people, seniors or other vulnerable people.

We have seen them not support measures such as the groceries and essentials benefit. They mocked the Canada summer jobs program, which offers 100,000 jobs. They just voted, again, against Bill C-30, which is offering skilled trades apprenticeship supports of $31,000 in total for each apprentice.

We have cut taxes in a number of areas, including income tax and the consumer carbon tax. We have suspended the excise tax on fuel. We have cut the tax on first home purchases. We have offered enhanced tax deductions for businesses in research and development and for buying new machinery and equipment.

If the hon. member really is for tax cuts, why did he just vote against seven new tax measures that will help with affordability for Canadians? It does not make sense to me. That includes Bill C-30, this afternoon at third reading, which the member voted against.

TaxationAdjournment Proceedings

3:35 p.m.

The Speaker Francis Scarpaleggia

The motion that the House do now adjourn is deemed to have been adopted. Accordingly, pursuant to order made earlier today, the House stands adjourned until Monday, September 21, at 11 a.m. pursuant to Standing Orders 24(1) and 28(2).

(The House adjourned at 3:37 p.m.)