The Senate has adopted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government’s budget bill, the final step in extending COVID-19 supports through the summer and ahead of a likely election in the fall.
Bill C-30 passed the┬аSenate┬а63-to-19 late Tuesday evening. Trudeau’s Liberals, who have a minority, last week pushed the bill through the House of Commons with the help of the opposition New Democrats and Bloc Quebecois.
The bill тАФ┬аthe country’s┬аfirst budget in more than two years тАФ┬аcontained extensions to key aid programs, such as the wage subsidy to help employers pay workers and supports to help businesses pay their rent.
Two other bills тАФ criminalizing LGBT conversion therapy and regulating programming on streaming services like Netflix тАФ┬аwere referred back to committee, likely leaving them to be dealt with after the summer break.
The┬аSenate added two sitting days this week to deal with a raft of bills approved by House lawmakers last week ahead of their summer break.
Critics have said the Liberals are trying to rush legislation ahead of a likely election in the fall.
Trudeau has publicly played down election talk, but sources told Reuters he was aiming for a September snap election to capitalize on┬аCanada’s emergence from the COVID-19 pandemic. The hope would be to secure a majority.
Trudeau’s Liberals led the main opposition Conservatives 34 per cent to 30 per cent┬аin a national poll released last week by Leger.