Can the Liberals use the return of the House to stop the bleeding?

The Liberal government has been plummeting in political opinion polling since the summer began.
Trudeau’s path back to glory

Parliament’s return could mark the moment the Liberals turn things around.
It’s time to step up on housing to get more homes built

Canada has the most expensive housing market and lowest housing stock per capita among G7 nations.
Green caucus priorities include congruently addressing climate and housing crisis

Failure to act on the climate emergency increases our costs, from extreme weather events costing billions of dollars each year, to inflation driven in part by climate events that destroy crops and reduce yields.
Earnscliffe, Métropolitain, iPolitics to host fall sitting shindig Tuesday night

MONDAY, SEPT. 18 House Resumes Sitting—The House will resume sitting on Monday, Sept. 18. It will sit for three weeks (Sept. 18-Oct. 6), and will adjourn on Friday, Oct. 6, for a week. It will resume sitting on Monday, Oct. 16, and will sit for four consecutive weeks (Oct. 16-Nov. 10). It will break for […]
Bills on gun control, digital privacy, and Métis governments among business in busy fall for Parliamentary committees

House and Senate committees will be reviewing bills related to the overhaul of federal privacy laws, the carbon price on farm fuel, and the seizure of dangerous drugs in the postal system.
How summer shaped the fall sitting: old issues with new focus, and shifting party dynamics

While the key policy themes in Parliament are largely unchanged from June to September, some will re-emerge in autumn with sharper or more urgent focus.
Wayne Eyre to deliver speech at C.D. Howe Institute lunch in Toronto on Sept. 12

MONDAY, SEPT. 11 House Not Sitting—The House is not sitting yet, but will resume on Monday, Sept. 18. It will sit for three weeks (Sept. 18-Oct. 6), and will adjourn on Friday, Oct. 6, for a week. It will resume sitting on Monday, Oct. 16, and will sit for four consecutive weeks (Oct. 16-Nov. 10). […]
This just in: Charlotte Gray, Alister Campbell, Kennedy Stewart, and Andrew McDougall all have new books out

Plus, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shuffles four bureaucrats, Chris Forbes and Suzy McDonald new top mandarins at Finance.
‘This should have been settled at the bargaining table’: unable to strike, PSAC says Parliamentary workers frustrated by delay tactics, impasse

PSAC says its 611 affected members are looking for the same respect, compensation, and equipment as their counterparts in parallel unions who have the right to strike.