Monday, October 31, 2016

Ottawa Observations: Monday, October 31, 2016



Our compilation of some of the stories of note from the day, reviewing the political developments from the Federal scene for October 31, 2016.


CETA talks 

CETA a bright light agains a protectionist world, says Chrystia Freeland
Paul Martin, former prime minister, welcomes signing of Canada-EU trad deal
Cheese and seafood among irritants threatening to cause stink during CETA ratification
'Tiny' but Mighty Wallonia Sets Stage for Bigger Changes to CETA
Wynne government welcomes signing of CETA free trade deal with EU



Liberals to hold immigration level steady in 2017
First Nations fight to halt resource development in northeast B.C.
Something Canadians can agree on: making life better for indigenous people
Liberals to support NDP motion on First Nations child welfare
Federal government missed deadline to clear Phoenix pay debacle
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appoints six new senators for Ontario
Liberal party president hitches a ride on government jet, but pays for it
Canada to open door to more skilled workers, immigrant families in 2017
Public works clarifies gag order as experts warn of chill in warship debate
Maxime Bernier beats Conservative rivals in funding over the summer
Justin Trudeau names top cop, prisoners' advocate as new senators
Pepper spray used with little accountability concerns watchdog
Transportation Safety Board wants more action on dozens of recommendations
Phoenix deadline arrives with some 22,000 claims still in backlog
Focus on innovation, not more cash, to improve health care: CMAJ editorial
Transport Canada making back-up cameras mandatory in new cars starting May 2018
Immigration targets to remain unchanged despite calls for significant increase
Canadian First Nations chiefs call on Trudeau to condemn U. S. pipeline
Canada must do its part to preserve biodiversity
Liberals in denial about Monsef story
New Senate appointments signal partisan politics by other means
Political fundraising is too much of a bad thing
Trudeau quietly held town hall where most were in favour of proportional voting system
UN offers The Rebel press accreditation for climate conference after environment minister's intervention
Job dissatisfaction and repeated moves across Country causing Canadian soldiers to quit, report says
All cars made after May 2018 must have rear-view camera systems, Transport Canada says
Liberals rapped as $900M unspent by Indigenous Affairs among 'lapsed' funding for fiscal 2016
As Canada Negotiates New Softwood Pact, Complaints of BC Subsidies Resurface
Federal Ministers LeBlanc, Wilson-Raybould visit Bella Bella site of sunken B.C.  tug
Crumbling roads: 33% of Canadians satisfied with national infrastructure, Ipsos poll finds



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