Cash chase – iPolitics


Canadians may be gaining a new partner for their savings account.

Ottawa is calling on everyday Canadians to put their savings to work alongside a new $25 billion public fund designed to bankroll major projects.

More information on the seed capital is expected to be released released in Tuesday’s economic update, but Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne suggested it will involve borrowing.

“[Canada] is one of the only two countries in the G7 with a AAA credit rating,” he said. “Canada can borrow on the international market at some of the lowest rates that you could see.”

Prime Minister Mark Carney says the new sovereign wealth fund will be professionally managed and will operate as a Crown corporation at arm’s length from the government.

It is the fourth major public investment vehicle to be created by the Liberals, with the Trudeau government launching the $35B Canada Infrastructure Bank, the $15B Clean Growth Fund or the $10B Indigenous Loan Guarantee Program in the past decade.

Aya Dufour has more. 

Some more heat charging at the Upper Chamber.

Government legislation overhauling bail and sentencing laws that passed on division in the House has spent over a month at committee in the Senate and may not pass until late May or early June.

The pace of handling the legislation has drawn criticism from the governing Liberals, who argue that senators are pushing back against requests to change the calendar to get the bill past the finish line.

The issue came to a head when members of the Senate legal committee rejected a move from the bill’s sponsor —  Sen. Pierre J. Dalphond — to have clause-by-clause on Bill C-14 wrap up on May 6, allowing it to return to the Senate before the start of a two-week break.

Instead, clause-by-clause will conclude on the May 7, meaning the bill likely won’t return to the Senate until May 26.

Defenders of the decision in the Senate noted that they were respecting the original schedule agreed to by the steering committee.

Marco Vigliotti has more. 

NDP Leader Avi Lewis holds a press conference in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday, April 27, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

NDP Leader Avi Lewis says he’s not “phased” amid MP Alexandre Boulerice’s move to run provincially for Québec Solidaire on Monday.

“This is a decision he has been mulling for many months,” Lewis told reporters at a press conference outside the House of Commons. “He’s taken a decision to continue the fight for all the causes that he’s championed here.”

Boulerice, who was Quebec’s only remaining federal NDP MP, will run provincially for Québec Solidaire in the Gouin riding.

At the press conference, Lewis showered Boulerice with praise, calling him a “beloved figure” and a “comrade” who supported other caucus members.

Sydney Ko has this one. 

Prime Minister Mark Carney walks with Liberal MPs Tatiana Auguste, left, Danielle Martin and Doly Begum as they make their way to a meeting of the Liberal Caucus in Ottawa, on Wednesday, April 15, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

Also, the three Liberals who won the byelections that secured a majority government for Prime Minister Mark Carney earlier this month took their seats in the House of Commons on Monday.

The government moved quickly to make use of its new majority powers by introducing a motion to limit debate on a change to the House rules that would enable the Liberals to take control of committees.

The Liberals are looking to change the structure of committees to ensure they have a majority of members. Committees study legislation and other government business and have the power to call witnesses and require the production of documents.

Government House leader Steven MacKinnon said the changes reflect the “long tradition” in Parliament that majority governments also hold a majority of seats on committees — though he acknowledged the situation is unusual.

The Canadian Press has more. 

In Other Headlines

Internationally

Elsewhere, the suspected gunman who tried to storm the White House correspondents’ dinner appeared in federal court and was charged with three federal crimes on Monday, including attempting to assassinate the president.

The alleged shooter, identified by law enforcement agencies as Cole Tomas Allen, a 31-year-old man from Torrance in southern California, was charged with attempting to assassinate the US president, transportation of firearms to commit a felony, and unlawful discharge of a firearm during violence.

The first charge carries a potential sentence of up to life in prison.

Court papers laying out the charges were not immediately available. Allen was being represented by lawyers with the federal defender’s office and sat beside them in court in a blue jail jumpsuit. Allen had three US marshals directly behind him during his appearance.

The Guardian has more. 

Meanwhile, rising oil and natural gas prices from the war in Iran are beginning to weigh on the Chinese economy, further slowing already anemic consumer spending and hurting critical export sectors.

Car sales fell in March and plunged further in April. Restaurants and hotels are seeing fewer customers as households turn cautious. In southern China, thousands of toy factory workers protested last week after their employer collapsed under rising plastic costs and ongoing tariffs in the United States.

The emerging signs of strain underscore how even China, with vast strategic oil reserves and massive investments in renewable energy, is not immune to the forces pressuring economies worldwide.

For many weeks, China had appeared to weather the fallout from the war, a view reinforced by fairly strong economic data through March. But with the war in its ninth week with no clear end, cracks are beginning to show.

Read more from the New York Times. 

In Other International Headlines

The Kicker

Could Ottawa have been cool this whole time time?

At Champagne Bath, Ottawa’s underground arts scene is turning a 1920s fitness pool into a DJ-driven hangout.

It’s a part of a series by a non-profit arts organization, Debaser, and they’re turning unlikely space into pop-up nightlife venues.

The Ottawa Citizen has more. 



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