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Parliament is in session today·Day 34 of 125 session days
Vote #3320 Jun 2025

Bill C-5 is about making it easier for people to work and trade across Canada, and this vote is to pass that proposed law.

Passed335 Yeas
1 Nays
2 Paired

What They Voted On

That part 1 and the short title be adopted.

What This Vote Is Really About

This vote is about whether to pass Bill C-5, which is about making it easier for workers to move and work in different parts of Canada. It also deals with building projects across the country. Right now, it can be hard for people with certain jobs to work in a different province because of different rules and requirements. Bill C-5 aims to fix this by making it easier for workers to get their qualifications recognized in other provinces. This could mean more job opportunities for people and help businesses find the workers they need. The bill also includes rules about building projects. It could change how these projects are planned and funded. This could affect the kinds of buildings and infrastructure that get built in your community, like roads, bridges, and public transit. Citizens should care about this vote because it could affect their job prospects, the economy, and the development of their communities. If Bill C-5 passes, it could lead to a more mobile workforce and new construction projects.

Related Bill

C-5

Canada Trade and Jobs Act

This new law wants to make it easier for people and goods to move between provinces. It should help create one big market across Canada. The goal is to boost the economy by reducing trade barriers.

Introduced Jun 6, 2025·Last discussed Jun 26, 2025
Liberal
Hon. Dominic LeBlanc
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 (332)
Nay (1)
Paired (2)
Did not vote (5)
Did Not Vote (8)
Liberal: 4Conservative: 4
Tatiana Auguste (Liberal)
Doly Begum (Liberal)
Michael Chong (Conservative)
Michael Cooper (Conservative)
Tom Kmiec (Conservative)
Danielle Martin (Liberal)
Pierre Poilievre (Conservative)
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal)