logo
Conservative caucus to meet Tuesday for first time since election loss

Conservative caucus to meet Tuesday for first time since election loss

CTV News01-05-2025

The Conservative Party caucus is set to meet for the first time since losing the federal election with a meeting set for next Tuesday, according to an internal memo obtained by CTV News.
The meeting is being called to 'exercise provisions set out in the Reform Act contained in Section 49 of the Parliament of Canada Act,' the memo reads.
Through the Reform Act — an initiative from Ontario Conservative MP Michael Chong that came into effect in 2015 — the caucus can vote on giving themselves four key internal powers for the coming session, including the ability to review and remove their party leader and elect an interim replacement.
If Conservatives want to forge ahead with a leadership review, 20 per cent of caucus would need to sign a formal agreement to trigger the process, and then it would require a majority of caucus members to vote to remove the leader through a secret-ballot process.
In 2022, the party used those powers to oust former Conservative leader Erin O'Toole months following the 2021 federal election loss.
But the party's current leader Pierre Poilievre appears to have support for now, despite losing his own seat and leading the party to its fourth failed attempt to defeat the Liberals.
Speaking to CTV Power Play on Wednesday, former leader and re-elected Conservative MP for the riding of Regina-Qu'Appelle Andrew Scheer said Poilievre is 'absolutely' staying on.
'Pierre is a fighter, and he's doing it for the people who have been left behind for this government. That's really what inspires him,' Scheer told host Vassy Kapelos.
Several prominent conservatives, including former prime minister Stephen Harper, have also taken to social media to defend Poilievre.
In a post to X on Tuesday, Harper congratulated Poilievre for 'making significant gains, both in seats and popular vote, and bringing an entire new generation of Canadians to the Conservative Party.'
According to a Conservative campaign source speaking to CTV News on background, Poilievre is 'making calls to the grassroots' and 'will get a seat' as party members want to see him back in the House of Commons.
But the process to get another seat will require a Conservative MP to step aside and the federal government to call a byelection, which could take several months.
According to Elections Canada, the Conservatives received 8,086,051 votes in this latest federal election, accounting for 41.3 per cent of the vote.
While the result is the party's highest total for the party since Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservatives won a majority government in 1988 with 43 per cent of the popular vote, Poilievre still lost the popular vote to the Liberals, who garnered 43.7 per cent of the vote share.
With files from CTV News' Abigail Bimman and Rachel Aiello

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Liberals say they aren't bound by vote calling for budget or fiscal update before summer
Liberals say they aren't bound by vote calling for budget or fiscal update before summer

Globe and Mail

time25 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Liberals say they aren't bound by vote calling for budget or fiscal update before summer

The minority Liberal government says it is not bound by a House of Commons vote this week calling on it to release a budget or economic update before the summer recess. The House of Commons is currently debating a motion in response to the government's May 27 Throne Speech, which was read by King Charles III and outlined the re-elected Liberal government's policy priorities. On Monday evening, the opposition parties voted together to approve a Conservative amendment to the Liberal motion that called for a 'a firm commitment to present to Parliament an economic update or budget this spring, before the House adjourns for the summer.' The motion was approved in a 166-164 vote. Conservative MPs repeatedly called on the government Tuesday during Question Period to meet the timeline laid out in the motion. Andrew Coyne: The only thing worse than not having a budget is having one 'Last night, the House passed our Conservative motion calling on the Prime Minister to table a spring budget,' Conservative MP Kelly McCauley said. 'Will the Prime Minister respect the will of Parliament and table a budget immediately so Canadians and this Parliament can have the transparency we deserve?' Prime Minister Mark Carney acknowledged the vote result but did not commit to moving up the timing of the 2025 budget. 'We take note of last night's motion,' he said, before listing his government's plans to support health care, child care, dental care and affordability measures. Throughout his responses to questions about the motion, Mr. Carney repeatedly highlighted his Monday meeting with provincial and territorial premiers. The meeting focused on potential large infrastructure projects as well as eliminating barriers to trade and investment. 'Unlike the members opposite, we know how to grow this economy without spending money,' he said, drawing howls from the opposition benches. He then pointed to his efforts to remove restrictions on interprovincial trade. Opinion: A Throne Speech fit for a king. But where's the budget? Liberal Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon played down the implications of the vote earlier in the day. 'It was a non-binding advisory resolution of the House of Commons. I suspect you're going to see a lot more of them,' he told reporters on his way in to a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill. Mr. MacKinnon said the main vote on the Throne Speech will take place Wednesday and is a confidence vote. He did not commit the government to bringing in a budget or update before summer. 'I think we'll take note of having been urged,' he said. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne originally said last month that the government would table an economic update in the fall, which suggested there would be no 2025 budget. However, Mr. Carney later said the government will release a full budget in the fall. Mr. Carney has said there wasn't enough time to release a budget in June given the late start of Parliament this year because of the federal election campaign. Federal budgets are typically released in February or March. Mr. Carney has also said the government faces important spending decisions in the near term related to potential support for large infrastructure projects and larger defence spending commitments at the NATO summit later this month. During Question Period, Mr. Champagne also said 'we take note of the vote yesterday,' but made no pledge to table a budget before the summer recess, which is scheduled to begin June 20. The House of Commons is set to resume sitting on Sept. 15.

Alberta and Ottawa tout a grand bargain on 'decarbonized' oil but some are skeptical
Alberta and Ottawa tout a grand bargain on 'decarbonized' oil but some are skeptical

Calgary Herald

timean hour ago

  • Calgary Herald

Alberta and Ottawa tout a grand bargain on 'decarbonized' oil but some are skeptical

Article content OTTAWA — 'Grand bargain' was the phrase of the day on Parliament Hill after Prime Minister Mark Carney and his provincial counterparts found common ground on oil and gas development. Article content 'If (the Conservatives) were listening to yesterday, there is a grand bargain,' Energy Minister Tim Hodgson boasted to the Opposition benches. Article content Article content 'There is a bargain that the premier of Alberta has signed onto.' Article content Article content Alberta Premier Danielle Smith left Monday's first ministers' meeting with a new deal exchanging oil sands access to coastal waters for massive investments in decarbonization technologies, but experts warn this could be a costly pipe dream. Article content Article content 'I'm worried we're seeing (the first ministers) fall into a trap of wanting to have their cake and eat it too,' said Tim McMillan, a partner at Garrison Strategy and the former head of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. Article content 'Let's call it the grand bargain,' Smith told reporters in Saskatoon, referring to the idea of twinning new pipeline proposals with large-scale decarbonization projects. Article content Carney said Monday that he'd consider fast-tracking a new oil pipeline to the West Coast if it shipped 'decarbonized barrels' to new markets. Article content Article content 'There's real potential there (and), if further developed, the federal government will look to advance it,' said Carney. Article content Article content But McMillan says the devil could be in the details. Article content 'I don't know exactly what they're talking about with decarbonization, but… it may be linked to carbon capture, which does not increase our exports (or) investability,' said McMillan. Article content The Calgary-based Pathways Alliance, a group of six major oil sands producers, has put forward a $16.5-billion decarbonization network that would reroute carbon emissions from nearly two dozen facilities to an underground hub near Cold Lake, Alta.

Milk Act to Bike Month: How Liberals are trying to slow Bill 5 with 4,000 amendments
Milk Act to Bike Month: How Liberals are trying to slow Bill 5 with 4,000 amendments

Global News

timean hour ago

  • Global News

Milk Act to Bike Month: How Liberals are trying to slow Bill 5 with 4,000 amendments

The Ontario Liberals have tabled more than 4,000 amendments to the province's controversial Bill 5 in a last-gasp attempt to slow its progress during the final day of committee and force the government to delay passing it into law. Bill 5 is the Ford government's mining legislation, which has sparked protests from First Nations leaders and environmental advocates over the planned creation of so-called special economic zones, where projects and companies could bypass laws. The proposed legislation's final day of committee hearings is Tuesday, with plans from the government to pass it into law before the end of the week, when MPPs rise for the summer break. The legislation got stuck in committee last week, after the Liberals and NDP came together to run out the clock on debate and force another day of hearings on the bill. Story continues below advertisement In response, the government tabled a time allocation motion, which cancels debate on any further amendments in committee and demands the draft legislation return to the house from committee for a third reading on Wednesday, regardless of whether all amendments have been addressed. As part of a desperate final attempt to slow the government's progress and force it to consider the bill over the summer, the Liberals have tabled thousands of amendments. The aim, again, is to run out the clock. While the number of amendments won't affect when committee wraps up — scheduled for midnight — the Liberals hope they can stop the government from passing its own changes to the bill. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The amendments tabled by the Liberals range from the serious to the absurd and number 4,022 in total. Amendments are voted on in the order the bill is laid out, so the party is attempting to stop the government from getting to its own amendments to the latter parts of the bill. 'The amendments aren't even read out, there's just going to be vote after vote after vote after vote,' Ontario Liberal MPP Ted Hsu said. 'With 4,000 amendments, that's enough amendments to get us through the 10.5 hours of committee meetings the government has scheduled.' During committee, the Progressive Conservatives introduced a number of tweaks and changes to their own legislation after backlash from First Nations leaders, emphasizing the government's respect for the duty to consult. Story continues below advertisement 'The government will not be able to do all of its amendments,' Hsu predicted. 1:46 First Nations members protest Ontario mining bill at Queen's Park Progressive Conservative House Leader Steve Clark, who is in charge of the government's legislative plan and strategy, would not be drawn on whether or not the Liberal strategy would frustrate Bill 5's progress further. 'We'll let the committee do its work and we'll deal with what the bill looks like to be reported back to the house when the committee's done at midnight,' he said. During question period, government ministers said the Liberal strategy was 'unserious' — pointing to some of the more obscure amendments used to get the party past 4,000. 'The Liberals had four weeks to prepare and file amendments if they thought the legislation needed to be strengthened,' Trade Minister Vic Fedeli said. Story continues below advertisement 'Here's what they put forward instead: A motion to assure that no exemptions are made to the requirements of the Milk Act. Their next motion was to ensure no exemptions are made to the requirements of the 2015 Ontario Bike Month Act. Then they put a motion to ensure no exemptions are made to the requirements of the Nikola Tesla Day Act.' The NDP, which worked with the Liberals last week to delay Bill 5 through a lengthy filibuster, appear not to be on board with the third party's strategy and wants to see the government forced to vote in favour, or against, the most controversial parts of the legislation. 'The fight against Bill 5 will not end tomorrow, when this legislation inevitably is passed by this government,' NDP Leader Marit Stiles said. 'It's not over yet. We've seen the government come back and have to repeal legislation like Bill 28, Bill 124 and the Greenbelt grab.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store