Bill C-41

Historical
Law (royal assent given)
Law

An Act to amend the Criminal Code and to make consequential amendments to other Acts

Bill C-41 has received Royal Assent and is now law. This bill is from the 44th Parliament, 1st session.

Sponsor:Marco Mendicino
Session: 44-1
Introduced: 2023-03-09

Other Bills Numbered C-41

Bill numbers are reused for different bills each new session. This bill number appeared in 11 sessions:

44-1

An Act to amend the Criminal Code and to make consequential amendments to other Acts

Law (royal assent given)
Law
42-1

An Act for granting to Her Majesty certain sums of money for the federal public administration for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2018

Law (royal assent given)
Law
41-2

An Act to implement the Free Trade Agreement between Canada and the Republic of Korea

Law (royal assent given)
Law
41-1

An Act for granting to Her Majesty certain sums of money for the federal public administration for the financial year ending March 31, 2013

Law (royal assent given)
Law
40-3

An Act to amend the National Defence Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts

Report stage (House)
40-2

An Act to give effect to the Maanulth First Nations Final Agreement and to make consequential amendments to other Acts

Law (royal assent given)
Law
39-2

An Act respecting payments to a trust established to provide provinces and territories with funding for community development

Law (royal assent given)
Law
39-1

An Act to amend the Competition Act

Second reading (House)
38-1

An Act for granting to Her Majesty certain sums of money for the public service of Canada for the financial year ending March 31, 2005

Law (royal assent given)
Law
37-2

An Act to amend certain Acts

In committee (Senate)
37-1

An Act to amend the Canadian Commercial Corporation Act

Law (royal assent given)
Law

Division Votes (1)

Division #371
Agreed To
2023-06-12T15:45:00

3rd reading and adoption of Bill C-41, An Act to amend the Criminal Code and to make consequential amendments to other Acts

299Yea
25Nay
4Paired

Vote by party

Liberal
152Y / 0N
Conservative
112Y / 0N
Bloc Québécois
30Y / 0N
NDP
0Y / 25N
Independent
3Y / 0N
Green Party
2Y / 0N

Parliamentary Debates (94)

Speeches in the House of Commons that mention Bill C-41.

Ms. Heather McPherson2023-12-11
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

…ht now, we have people who are severely food insecure, who need help, yet we have the Liberals with Bill C-41 making it very difficult to deliver that aid, and we have the Conservatives literally voting to stop it. In fact, they ran in the last election on cutting foreign aid by 25%. How do—

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Mr. Alexis Brunelle-Duceppe2023-12-11
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

…e Party, to put pressure on the government, which was far too slow to act. It eventually introduced Bill C-41, which we passed. This legislation is not perfect; in fact, it is quite imperfect. I found this out last week during a committee meeting, when I asked NGO representatives about it. They told us that …

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Ms. Heather McPherson2023-12-11
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

… it. At the initial time when we heard we were doing a concurrence debate, it was going to be about Bill C-41, or the aid to Afghanistan bill. Of course, the Conservatives must have made a mistake, because they do not actually care what they are bringing forward to the House. They are just trying to come up …

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Ms. Heather McPherson2023-11-06
Questions on the Order Paper
0

Routine Proceedings

With regard to the implementation of Bill C-41, An Act to amend the Criminal Code and to make consequential amendments to other Acts: (a) what is the status of the required guidance for applicants to the authorization regime established by Bill C…

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Ms. Jennifer O’Connell2023-11-06
Questions on the Order Paper
0

Routine Proceedings

…lications have been received, granted and refused, among other things. It is important to note that Bill C-41 received royal assent on June 20, 2023, and since that date, a humanitarian exception pursuant to subsection 83.03(4) of the Criminal Code has been in effect. This meets the immediate need for humani…

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Mr. Mark Gerretsen2023-06-13
Government Business No. 26—Amendments to the Stand…
0

Government Orders

…f Commons, because it was only a short three sitting days ago that the member spoke in the House on Bill C-41 by giving a virtual speech through Zoom. I am assuming he had good reason not to be in the chamber to do that and there was a really good reason he needed to do it by Zoom, and that is what put him i…

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Mr. Gary Anandasangaree2023-06-12
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

…ht direction. Of course, with every bill that we pass, there are always questions. None is perfect. Bill C-41 is a good compromise that has the broad support of all the parties in this House.

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Ms. Heather McPherson2023-06-12
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

… point. I also want to go back to some of the discussions the member brought forward with regard to Bill C-41. The member would know that I did not vote in support of this bill for the simple reason that I find that there are some real challenges to this legislation. As much as we were able to work together …

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Mr. Gary Anandasangaree2023-06-12
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

…eak on the concurrence report with respect to the Taliban. This afternoon I was very pleased to see Bill C-41 pass in this House. It is a very important bill, one that many people have been working on for several months. Most notably, it is something that the justice committee has been working on for the las…

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Mr. Garnett Genuis2023-06-12
Committees of the House
0

Routine Proceedings

…icularly of the IRGC. It has been five years since the House voted to list the IRGC. The passage of Bill C-41 may, from the perspective of the government, remove a potential impediment. Is the government open to now moving forward with listing the IRGC as a terrorist organization, as it voted to do five year…

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