Montreal Gazette

DECIDING HOW PARLIAMENT SHOULD CONTINUE TO MEET DURING THE PANDEMIC WILL BE ONE OF THE TOP ISSUES FACING MPS AS THEY RETURN TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ON MONDAY AFTER A MONTH-LONG BREAK.

Sessions set to resume after uneasy break

- LEE BERTHIAUME

• Members of Parliament return to the House of Commons on Monday following a month-long break that was anything but restful to again face the ramificati­on of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the threat of a possible election.

One of the first orders of business will be for MPS to decide how Parliament will continue to function during the COVID-19 pandemic, including whether to let parliament­arians continue attending remotely and whether to adopt a new voting app for those who do.

Those decisions come amid a much-changed situation as Ontario and Quebec remain under lockdown and stay-at-home orders following record-setting surges in new cases through much of the past month.

Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez's office on Sunday said the Liberals had held “constructi­ve” discussion­s with the other parties, and there were signs that the measure would be

ONTARIO AND QUEBEC REMAIN UNDER LOCKDOWN AND STAY-AT-HOME ORDERS.

adopted without much fuss.

Yet an agreement on the functionin­g of Parliament is likely to be the exception rather than the rule as opposition parties have indicated they plan to go hard at the government on a number of fronts — starting with its handling of the pandemic.

The Liberals are expected to table new legislatio­n this week aimed at preventing people who have travelled outside the country on non-essential business from being able to access up to $1,000 in federal sick-leave benefits to pay for their 14-day quarantine after returning.

Yet delays in the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines are expected to dominate the agenda, with opposition parties indicating they plan to press the Liberals for answers on why Canada is facing delays in the delivery and distributi­on of shots — and what Ottawa is doing about it.

That includes the news last week that Canada would receive only a fraction of the Pfizer-biontech vaccinatio­ns originally promised over the next few weeks, though Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said Pfizer has promised to deliver 4 million doses by the end of March.

Opposition parties have blamed the government for mishandlin­g the rush to approve and buy vaccines, saying the Liberals have left Canada far behind other countries in terms of inoculatin­g its citizens.

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