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Parliament is in session today·Day 68 of 125 session days
Vote #140Counted Vote8 Jun 2026

Bill C-33 is a proposed law to give money to the government to pay for its services until March 31, 2027.

Passed191 Yeas
134 Nays
12 Paired

What They Voted On

That the bill be now read a third time and do pass.

What This Vote Is Really About

This vote is about giving the Canadian government permission to spend money. Specifically, it's about approving a proposed law called Bill C-33. This proposed law sets out how much money different government departments can spend to run the country for the year that ends on March 31, 2027. This vote has a huge impact because it decides how your tax dollars are used. If this proposed law passes, it means money will be available for things like paying doctors and nurses, funding schools, maintaining national parks, and supporting programs for seniors or families. Without this vote, the government couldn't pay for these essential services. You should care because this vote directly affects the services you rely on every day. It's about making sure the government has the funds to keep Canada running smoothly. It also shows how the government plans to use the money it collects from taxes, which is important for everyone to understand.

Related Bill

C-33

Federal budget 2026-27

This proposed law would let the government spend money to run Canada for the year ending March 31, 2027. It gives funds to government departments so they can keep providing services and programs to people.

Introduced Jun 8, 2026·Last discussed 4 days ago
Liberal
Hon. Shafqat Ali
Liberal
Chance of
Passing
98%
Very likely
How Canada Voted
How the House Voted

Hover over a seat to see details, click to view the member's profile.

Speaker
Speaker's Left
Speaker's Right
Yea (191)
Nay (134)
Paired (12)
Did not vote (6)
Did Not Vote (6)
Conservative: 2Bloc Québécois: 2Independent: 1Liberal: 1
Carol Anstey (Conservative)
Yves-François Blanchet (Bloc Québécois)
Maxime Blanchette-Joncas (Bloc Québécois)
Billy Morin (Conservative)
Simon-Pierre Savard-Tremblay (Independent)
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal)