Bill S-245
An Act respecting a National Blanket Ceremony Day
Bill S-245 has passed the House and is being considered in the Senate.
Other Bills Numbered S-245
Bill numbers are reused for different bills each new session. This bill number appeared in 4 sessions:
An Act respecting a National Blanket Ceremony Day
An Act to amend the Citizenship Act (granting citizenship to certain Canadians)
An Act to declare the Trans Mountain Pipeline Project and related works to be for the general advantage of Canada
An Act to amend the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and other Acts (unfunded pension plan liabilities)
Division Votes (1)
2nd reading of Bill S-245, An Act to amend the Citizenship Act (granting citizenship to certain Canadians)
Vote by party
Parliamentary Debates (80)
Speeches in the House of Commons that mention Bill S-245.
Government Orders
…another version of it at least 45 times. For that reason, I really have no need of notes. There was Bill S-245 in the previous Parliament and Bill C-71, which was almost identical to Bill C-3. That said, when we invited experts to appear before the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration when it was…
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… C‑3 in the House today. We also know that this issue has been dragging on for years. Bill C-71 and Bill S-245 were introduced to address citizenship. An election was called and the bill died on the Order Paper. Now we have to hurry due to this court ruling and the fact that this matter has unfortunately been…
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…d version of Bill C- 71, with portions hijacked from Senator Yonah Martin's thoughtful and targeted Bill S-245. However, instead of building on that work with care and clarity, the Liberals have chosen to abolish the first-generation limit, a measure introduced by former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2009 …
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… If they did not apply, they lost it. They do not think that is right. Senator Yonah Martin brought Bill S-245 to address this specific issue. Unfortunately, it did not get through the House before another election was called, so I am glad to see that provision come back here. The people in question are in th…
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…ctive, that is not a good thing. How did we get to this place? Originally, way back when, there was Bill S-245, which was meant to fix one simple thing: the issue of lost Canadians. Then there was a court ruling that happened in Ontario that the federal government chose not to appeal. The Liberals chose to al…
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…mportant to pass this legislation back to its original form, based on the amendments made to Senate Bill S-245 that I motivated. It is also based on the government bill later introduced in the last Parliament as Bill C-71. Here we are. It is morally and legally the right thing to do, and that is why we have t…
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…ent coat of paint. Let us be clear that it was originally Conservative legislation from the Senate. Bill S-245 was a private member's bill containing provisions to address lost Canadians. The Conservatives were supportive of the original substance of that bill, but thanks to the Liberal government, the bill w…
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…hamber. For those who have not been following Bill C-3, it is the third iteration, which started as Bill S-245 in the other place, introduced in the last Parliament. The original iteration of the bill was commendable and received bipartisan support from this chamber. In it, the bill sought to achieve two key …
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…ntroduced as Bill C-71 in the previous Parliament, it builds on Conservative Senator Yonah Martin's Bill S-245, which targeted a narrow group that was inadvertently affected by the 2009 reforms under the Harper government. This is something we have had our eye and focus on to make sure there is some fairness …
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…. It was tabled by the previous Liberal government as Bill C-71 and, before that, in the Senate, as Bill S-245, which was heavily altered by the Liberals and New Democrats, yet another classic example of a Liberal band-aid-like solution to a problem without considering the consequences. Citizenship is a conne…
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