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Parliament returns Monday, June 15
Vote #144Counted Vote9 Jun 2026

A proposal to end the House's meeting.

Defeated124 Yeas
186 Nays
12 Paired

What They Voted On

That this House do now adjourn.

What This Vote Is Really About

This vote is simply about whether the Members of Parliament should stop their meeting for the day. If they vote yes, they go home and come back another day. If they vote no, they keep working and debating. The real impact is on the schedule of Parliament. If they adjourn, any discussions or votes that were planned for later in the day are put on hold. This can pause important debates on proposed laws or delay decisions on big issues until the next time they meet. Citizens should care because how Parliament manages its time affects how quickly things get done. Sometimes, a party might use a motion to adjourn to stop a debate they don't like, or to delay a vote. It's a way for Members of Parliament to control the flow of business and decide what gets discussed and when.

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 (124)
Nay (186)
Paired (12)
Did not vote (21)
Did Not Vote (21)
Conservative: 14Bloc Québécois: 2NDP: 2Liberal: 2Independent: 1
Scott Anderson (Conservative)
Jim Bélanger (Conservative)
Yves-François Blanchet (Bloc Québécois)
Maxime Blanchette-Joncas (Bloc Québécois)
Alexandre Boulerice (Independent)
Michael Chong (Conservative)
Don Davies (NDP)
Mike Dawson (Conservative)
Steven Guilbeault (Liberal)
Gord Johns (NDP)
Tom Kmiec (Conservative)
Melissa Lantsman (Conservative)
Shuvaloy Majumdar (Conservative)
David McKenzie (Conservative)
Rob Morrison (Conservative)
Glen Motz (Conservative)
Pierre Poilievre (Conservative)
Scott Reid (Conservative)
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal)
Kyle Seeback (Conservative)
Fraser Tolmie (Conservative)