This vote had already been taken by the time you posted, and failed. In fact, Vote #158 followed it, and passed.hussinhamid said:the latest on the parliament site
Vote #157 on May 29th, 2014
Bill
C-24 An Act to amend the Citizenship Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts
Vote topic
That the motion be amended by deleting all the words after the word “That” and substituting the following:
“the House decline to give second reading to Bill C-24, An Act to amend the Citizenship Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts, because it:
( a) does not provide an adequate solution for reducing citizenship application processing times, which have been steadily increasing;
( b) puts significant new powers in the hands of the Minister that will allow this government to politicize the granting of Canadian citizenship;
( c) gives the Minister the power to revoke citizenship, which will deny some Canadians access to a fair trial in Canada and will raise serious questions since Canadian law already includes mechanisms to punish those who engage in unlawful acts; and
( d) includes a declaration of intent to reside provision, which in fact gives officials the power to speculate on the intent of a citizenship applicant and then potentially deny citizenship based on this conjecture.”.
While I agree there are parts of the bill that are unfair, I wouldn't go so far as to question if Canada is democratic.rayman_m said:2nd reading completed on 29.05 and referred to committee. It's now up to committee whether they will take some time to study and come up report with amendments or will follow Harper's intention to pass the bill quickly within June...
I wonder how Canada call is a democratic country when opposition MPs complained that only 5 MP has discussed on the bill before 2nd reading ? and they wanted more more MPs to take part in discussion. But sadly, Harper ignored due to his brute majority and doing whatever he wants like a 3rd world country PM does. He forced to vote on 2nd reading yesterday mid night when people are in sleep...
They were voted in to represent a majority of population but the trust on them wasn't meant to be permanent. At the time of election they were probably good at convincing people but now showing their true colors. Failure of democracy is the fact that once the party becomes majority, the rest becomes puppets - opposition and Canadians.Matt the Aussie said:While I agree there are parts of the bill that are unfair, I wouldn't go so far as to question if Canada is democratic.
People voted Stephen Harper and the Conservatives in. All sorts of bills that have questionable stuff in them are similarly passed without much debate as it is the majority of the House of Commons (and within that, the cabinet ministers) that decides what laws to propose and then pass. There are many countries that are not 3rd world where this happens (from my experience, Australia is pretty much the same).
And what makes you think "a majority of the population" sides with immigrants on these issues? I would think the opposite. Personally, even I can see there are some good parts in this bill but there are also concerns.civic said:They were voted in to represent a majority of population but the trust on them wasn't meant to be permanent. At the time of election they were probably good at convincing people but now showing their true colors. Failure of democracy is the fact that once the party becomes majority, the rest becomes puppets - opposition and Canadians.
In fact, The majority of Canadians absolutely have no idea what immigration means to their fellow Canadians or immigrants. I asked all my Canadian co workers. None of them give a sh!t about the bill, they dont even know it existed let alone what's on it. That is not a topic of interest for the vast majority of Canadians. The election rate in Canada is among the lowest as compared to other Western countries. The people dont care, dont know. They are forced to believe newcomers are here to take their job, use their resource - unless they do their own research.Matt the Aussie said:And what makes you think "a majority of the population" sides with immigrants on these issues? I would think the opposite. Personally, even I can see there are some good parts in this bill but there are also concerns.
I cannot believe we are still trying to figure out what happened yesterday .hussinhamid said:HI Zardoz
Do you mean the 4- points listed in my post as exclusions were rejected to be excluded from the bill in vote # 157 and then in Vote # 158 were accepted to be excluded from the bill please elaborate on this point and which vote is to our favor as an immigrants .