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Bill C-207 — Changements proposés au Régime de pensions du Canada

Modifications au RPC

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Introduced Jun 10, 2025
Résumé

This proposed law wants to change the rules for the Canada Pension Plan (CPP). Right now, most people can start getting their full CPP retirement money at age 65. This proposed law would let some people start getting it at age 60. To qualify, you would need to have worked in a job that is very physically demanding. This change would affect people who work in tough, physical jobs. Think construction workers, miners, or people who do heavy lifting all day. It would give them the option to retire earlier without losing money from their pension. It also affects all Canadians who contribute to the CPP, as earlier retirement for some could impact the overall fund. This matters because physically demanding jobs can take a toll on the body. People in these jobs might not be able to work until 65 without pain or injury. This proposed law could give them a chance to retire earlier and enjoy their retirement years while they are still healthy. It also raises important questions about fairness and how we support workers in different types of jobs.

What MPs Are Saying
NDP

I want to make the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) stronger. My bill would let Canadians have more say in what happens to their CPP, so politicians can't risk their retirement money. It will make sure that big changes to the CPP need approval from most provinces, protecting everyone's pensions.

Bill Timeline
Introduced in the House
Jun 10, 2025
Where This Lands on Key Issues

Where this proposed law falls on the policy spectrums that Canadians care about

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Bill Quality
Solid

This proposed law makes it harder to change the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) by requiring more provinces to agree. This protects the CPP from changes that might not benefit everyone, but it could also make it harder to update the CPP in the future to meet changing needs.

Things to Watch For

  • Watch if this makes it harder to improve CPP benefits in the future.
  • Pay attention to which provinces support or oppose changes, and why.
  • Consider if this gives too much power to individual provinces to block changes.
Progress

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