Tory senators deny stalling private members’ bills on Indigenous rights
OTTAWA — Conservative senators are being blamed for running out the parliamentary clock on a number of bills, including several aimed at advancing the rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The Conservatives’ Senate whip says the Liberal government will have only itself to blame if the bills aren’t passed before Parliament breaks for the summer and the subsequent fall election. Sen. Don Plett says allegations of Conservative stalling tactics are unfair.
Nevertheless, it’s the Tory contingent in the upper house, and Plett in particular, who are bearing the brunt of Indigenous leaders’ wrath.
Perry Bellegarde, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, has accused Conservative senators of employing “outrageous, shameful and undemocratic procedural tactics” to make sure Bill C-262 never sees the light of day. That’s a private member’s bill introduced by New Democrat MP Romeo Saganash that would ensure federal laws are harmonized with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).