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Parliament returns Wednesday, July 22
Vote #173Counted Vote18 Jun 2026

Voting on Bill C-30, a proposed law to carry out parts of the spring economic update from April 28, 2026.

Passed166 Yeas
159 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 was about giving final approval to a proposed law called Bill C-30. This proposed law was designed to put into action some of the financial plans the government announced in its spring economic update from April 2026. It was the last step in the House of Commons before the proposed law could become a real law. This proposed law makes changes to how people pay taxes. For example, it now allows people to claim up to $10,000 off their taxes for certain costs they have because of their job. This means some workers could pay less tax. The law also changes some rules about how certain investments and business sales are taxed, which affects business owners and investors. Citizens should care about this vote because it directly affects their money. If you have work expenses, you might now be able to save money on your taxes. If you own a business or have investments, the rules for selling them have changed. This vote was crucial because it made these important tax changes happen across Canada.

Related Bill

C-30

Implementing the Spring Economic Plan

This proposed law would make changes to taxes. It would let people deduct up to $10,000 for certain work-related expenses. It also changes some rules about capital gains and business transfers.

Introduced Apr 29, 2026·Last discussed yesterday
Liberal
Hon. François-Philippe Champagne
Liberal
New Law
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 (165)
Nay (158)
Paired (12)
Did not vote (6)
Did Not Vote (6)
Conservative: 3Liberal: 2Bloc Québécois: 1
James Bezan (Conservative)
Mark Carney (Liberal)
Claude DeBellefeuille (Bloc Québécois)
Billy Morin (Conservative)
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal)
Andrew Scheer (Conservative)