Conservative Stone promises to tighten the rules of financial transparency for elected officials – and uses this promise to target the liberal leader Mark Carney.
Hairyvre on Sunday told a press conference in Ottawa that if his party forms the government, he would prohibit what he calls “shadow lobbying”.
“We will eliminate the lobbying flaw and obliged anyone who acts as an adviser to government representatives to declare themselves and register as a lobbyist, each time they advise on issues that approach their financial interests or that of their business,” said Hairy.
He said that this rule would have forced Carney to register as a lobbyist when he advised former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to the Liberal Party.
The conservative chief also said that he demanded that ministers “fully disintegrate from tax havens” and disclose their assets – more shooting in Carney, who was examined for not having disclosed his financial assets and because his former Brookfield Asset Management company recorded entities in the tax haven of the Cayman Islands.
Hairyvre invoiced its set of measures such as the “Act respecting responsibility 2.0” – a reference to a law adopted by the former government Stephen Harper. He inaugurated the rules of modern parliamentary ethics and created the offices of the lobbying and ethical commissioners.

Carney’s campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comments. Carney declared in the past that he had put his assets in a blind trust and that she was in discussion with the ethics commissioner on the creation of a conflict of interest screen.

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But his deposit of disclosure of ethics may not be released only after the elections – and Carney said nothing about what happened in the blind trust.
Hairyvre also accused the liberal chief of “hiding from the public” by not taking questions for several days and refusing to say more about his investments.
Journalists have asked if Carney’s decision to go back from the campaign is important, because it does not seem to have done him political harm, Hairyvre replied: “It is a choice that Canadians will have to make.”
The Carney campaign was in the event of a break before a crucial week during the elections. These breaks are not unusual in a campaign – but Carney notably refused to respond to journalists in Parliament Friday after a meeting of the cabinet committee.
Carney and Hairyvre are expected in Montreal on Sunday evening for an interview on the popular Talk show of Quebec “Everyone talks about it”.
The influential Radio-Canadade program regularly obtains nearly one million viewers per week and is considered a crucial means for party federal leaders to present themselves in Quebec.
Carney’s ability to speak French has been examined since he had trouble during the French language debate in the race for liberal management.

Carney will face a more intimidating task in the debate of the French language on Wednesday, where he will face the chief of hairy and Quebec Bloc Yves -François Blanchet – both qualified French language debaters who will be looking for blunders and misdeeds.
The leader of the NPD, Jagmeet Singh, held his campaign in Timmins, Ontario on Sunday, where he spoke of his plan for northern Ontario.
The Liberals align the former mayor of Timmins and Steve Black municipal councilor in driving. He runs against Nicole Fortier Levesque du NPD, former mayor of Moonbeam, have.
Singh is down two NPD holders in northern Ontario very prominent during this election. Charlie Angus, a long -standing deputy in the region, no longer works.
The faithful of the Carol Hughes party also leaves federal policy after his conduct from Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapuskaste has been withdrawn from the political map by the redistribution and divided between the surrounding districts.
Hughes was one of the figures flanking Singh at his morning press conference, where he used these two former deputies as examples of votes from the strong NPDs that the North sent to the Parliament in the past.
Singh also said that the other major party leaders had not substantially addressed indigenous problems in this election.
“I put the other parties to the challenge of making a fundamental and important problem in this campaign,” he said.
& Copy 2025 the Canadian press