Monday, October 3, 2016

Ottawa Observations: Monday, October 3, 2016



Our compilation of some of the stories of note from the day, reviewing the political developments from the Federal scene for October 3, 2016.


Ottawa's housing reforms target foreign buyers, mortgage debt
Liberal government's carbon tax plan provokes anger from provinces
Ukraine warns Canada not to trust Russian co-operation over Arctic
Union calls for review of temporary foreign workers program
New housing rules a necessary dose of preventive medicine
Stress tests won't fix Canada's heated housing market
Ottawa has brought this country's housing fantasy to an end
Health Canada approves non-prescription naloxone nasal spray
Canadians uneasy about Trudeau's handling of economy, poll suggests
Liberals set to fall short on youth green jobs promise, data show
On Monsef case, the Liberals are acting just like Harperites
Justin Trudeau gives provinces until 2018 to adopt carbon price plan
Sask., N.S. and N.L. ministers walk out of climate talks as Trudeau announces carbon price
Here's where the provinces stand on carbon prices
Trudeau won't commit to premier's demand for meeting on health
Health Canada OK's non-prescription nasal spray overdose antidote
Canada faces choice on international drug treaties over legalized pot
Backlog of applications for veterans benefits greater than 11,500
Ottawa tightens mortgage requirements and targets foreign money
Senators Claude Carignan to table bill aimed at getting impaired drivers off roads
Canada-wide asbestos inventory 'a positive step,' say health and safety advocates
Spies use new anti-terror law to collect intelligence from Canadians detained overseas
Liberal government falls short on promise to create 5,000 jobs for youth
Justin Trudeau's Liberals unveil plan to price carbon
Trudeau government remains oddly Harperesque
President security expert says legislation fatally flawed
PM's carbon pricing scheme means bigger government, not lower emissions
The Maryam Monsef double standard
Trudeau imposes a sin tax on energy
Trudeau outsmarts opponents on carbon pricing
Group seeks $500M from federal Liberals to fund 1,600 'Guardians' to patrol, assert aboriginal sovereignty
Premiers finally come up with something to negotiate in health-care negotiations
'The level of disrespect shown by the Prime Minister and his government today is stunning': Brad Wall
'No hiding from climate change': Liberal carbon price $10 a tonne in 2018, $50 by 2022
Notley says no support for Liberal carbon price without pipeline progress
Bill C-51: Less Free Speech Undermines De-radicalization



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