Carney pledges collaboration, substantive debate in majority Parliament
OTTAWA — The morning after the Liberals secured a majority government, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canadians can expect Parliament to be more substantive and less performative.
“There’s a difference between real testimony, real substance, getting to issues, debating aspects of law, advancing — that’s the job of parliamentarians — and showboating,” he said.
The governing party held seats in three byelections on Monday in Terrebonne, north of Montreal, and Scarborough Southwest and University—Rosedale, both in Toronto. Once the winning candidates are sworn in, the Liberal benches in the House of Commons will have 174 MPs, two more than the minimum needed for a majority.
Those bolstered numbers — five more seats than the Liberals won in last April’s election — come courtesy of the five MPs who’ve crossed the aisle from the opposition benches. Since November, four Conservatives and one New Democrat have joined the Liberal ranks.
