Daily evidence briefs from House of Commons Question Period.
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Question Period centred on the economy, housing, and affordability, with Conservatives pressing the government on the cost of living, housing costs, and economic management. Liberals defended recent fiscal measures and argued global shocks, not only domestic policy, are driving pressure on households. The Bloc Québécois raised government priorities and housing-related concerns. The NDP focused on Indigenous funding and reconciliation-related issues. The exchange was adversarial, with parties framing the same affordability and public service questions very differently.
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Question Period focused mainly on the economy and affordability, with a second major exchange on democratic institutions and Bill C-22. Conservatives pressed the government on recession, food banks, housing affordability, business investment, and household costs. The Bloc Québécois challenged time allocation, surveillance powers, and parliamentary scrutiny. Ministers responded by emphasizing new international investment, existing affordability supports, and public safety/crime prevention measures.
5 parties/groups 3 themes 6 claims 6 sources
Question Period on June 16, 2026 centred mainly on the economy, privacy, democratic institutions, housing, public safety, and sector-specific files. Conservatives pressed the government on cost of living, taxation, and handling of public policy files; the Liberals responded across multiple ministers, emphasizing government action and cautioning against misinformation. The exchange also reflected recurring cross-party tensions over Bill C-9 / hate symbols in the broader sitting, but the Question Period block itself was dominated by policy accountability questions rather than one single issue.
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Question Period covered the economy, government priorities, climate change, seniors, access to information, artificial intelligence, taxation, health, public safety, youth, and indigenous affairs. The dominant exchanges featured Conservative criticism of Liberal economic and tax policy, with ministers defending budget measures, clean-economy investment tax credits, and productivity incentives. The Bloc Québécois and Green Party appeared in some exchanges on government priorities and climate-related issues. The questions and responses mostly centered on affordability, investment competitiveness, energy policy, and the scope and design of federal tax credits.
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