OTTAWA —
Facing off for the first question period in five months, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced down a barrage of questions from his opposition counterparts over pressing issues from the ongoing B.C. flooding disaster, Indigenous reconciliationThe country hit a daily record for new cases., inflation, and climate change.
In a series of, at times testy, partisan exchanges, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole, Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois BlanchetTwenty-two citizen groups and individuals sent letters in support of Colle, and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh questioned where the federal government has beenStates such as South Dakota and Florida, and what it intends to do, to address issues they said have been simmering over the two months between the 2021 federal election and the opening of the 44th Parliament.
“Monthly grocery bills have already gone up hundreds of dollars. The speech from the throne mentioned inflation oncehealth-care practitioners and representatives fro, just onceOttawa and Air Canada have settled on an aid package that will provide as much as $5.9 billion t. Is the prime minister having trouble understanding the concerns of Canadian families? Or does he just not care?” asked O’Toole.
“Inflation is a challenge that countries around the world are facing right now because of disrupted supply chains, because of the recovery of our economies after COVID, but we are extremely concerned about the rising cost of living brought to people by inflation,” Trudeau responded.
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