Friday, December 16, 2016

Ottawa Observations: Friday, December 16, 2016



Our compilation of some of the stories of note from the day, reviewing the political developments from the Federal scene for Friday, December 16, 2016.

Ottawa takes hard line with provinces on health transfers
Trudeau invited Liberal donors to official dinner for Chinese Premier
The price Trudeau pays for failing to address cash-for-access scandal
Bennett pledges aboriginal housing improvements after fatal Ontario fire
Minister Patty Hajdu approved $1.1-million price tag to build new office
Trudeau says current pot law stands until new legislation is ratified
Ottawa's asbestos ban leaves Quebec town pondering its name
Finance Minister to provinces: More health money, but deal must be reached Monday
Trudeau government renews contract of ethics watchdog as she questions his fundraising efforts
Want to help Aleppo? Give to large organizations ready to act when access improves, says minister
Status of women minister approved $1.1 million to renovate office
Bonuses for Phoenix executives still under review, department insists
New indigenous school board in Manitoba 'historic,' federal cabinet minister says
Smoother military exit system for soldiers still years away, documents show
Few signs Justin Trudeau has delivered on promises
How Justin Trudeau can get back on track in 2017
Curious Commons report would return postal home delivery only to some
Labour Laws in Canada need to change
The stupid things Trudeau says
Cash-for-access fails the smell test
Government was warned about website boondoggle years ago
Get tough on dual nation terrorists, senator urges
Committee's terrible idea Canada Post should get on the 'Information Superhighway'
If economy and environment are the twin peaks of PM's concern, where's his passion for jobless oil workers?
Status of Women minister spent $1.1M to have new office built even with quicker, cheaper option available
Climate Change Politics in the Age of Trudeau and Trump: What's Next?
John Wallace only Senator keeping pledge to leave Senate after 8 years
Trudeau, Couillard hopeful Ottawa will reach a deal with Bombardier
Opposition parties eagerly await 2017, while Liberals brace for choppy waters
Minority of Canadians polled disagree with Trudeau's pipeline decisions: Ipsos







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