Liberals won't explain why health committee was moved behind closed doors | Page 6 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Jordan Gowling
Publication Date: April 29, 2026 - 12:05

Stay informed

Liberals won't explain why health committee was moved behind closed doors

April 29, 2026

OTTAWA — Liberal members of the House of Commons committee on health did not provide an explanation on Wednesday for why they moved debate behind closed doors during a meeting on Tuesday.

The committee was meeting to discuss PrescribeIT, a program that was launched in 2017 to provide an electronic prescription service for pharmacists and doctors, overseen by Canada Health Infoway, a non-profit funded by the federal government.

The program was cancelled this year, with operations set to end on May 29, due to a slow uptick in the adoption of the product.

Conservative health critic Dan Mazier has said the program began with a $40-million budget but has since ballooned to $300 million over the past decade.

This week, Conservatives called for the auditor general to investigate the program.

During Tuesday’s meeting, Mazier moved a motion for the committee to acquire documents and financial information from Canada Health Infoway and Telus Health on the PrescribeIT program.

Parliamentary Secretary of Health Maggie Chi then moved to hold the meeting in-camera. A vote followed, with no explanation as to why the debate needed to be shielded from the public.

The Liberals’ recently acquired majority in the House of Commons means they now have most seats at committees, which means Tuesday’s health committee vote carried.

On their way into a caucus meeting on Wednesday morning, Liberal MP Doug Eyolfson and Liberal MP Sonia Sidhu, both members of the committee, did not respond to reporters’ questions about the matter.

Conservative members of the committee expressed their frustration on Wednesday morning.

“It was astounding, it was awful, I think if that’s what Mark Carney plans to do with his newfound majority, I think Canadians should be really, really distressed,” said Conservative MP Matt Strauss.

Conservative MP Burton Bailey said he was “very disgusted” when asked about the issue.

Mazier was told reporters that they should direct their questions to the Liberals on what this means for the status of a potential investigation into the program.

Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon pushed back on the notion that his party is shutting down debate.

“Well, I reject the premise,” he told reporters. “No one’s shutting down debate.”

“We’re having lots of debate every day on a very ambitious legislative agenda,” he added.

National Post

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
I’m trying to figure out what Prime Minister Mark Carney thought he was doing at this year’s Global Progress Action Summit. The Global Progress Action Summit is an annual gathering of Canadian Liberals, United Kingdom Labour figures, United States Democrats, and assorted compatible figures from other countries. Carney spoke at this year’s summit on Saturday in Toronto, which took place the day after former US president Barack Obama gave a speech for Canada 2020, the Canadian organizers of the Global Progress Action Summit. This was, in turn, the day after the Public Policy Forum’s annual...
May 18, 2026 - 06:30 | Paul Wells | Walrus
An Ontario university is going on the offensive against a YouTube prankster in a unique lawsuit, asking a judge to force him to turn over the profits from viral videos filmed without permission on their campus. In a statement of claim, Ontario Tech University alleges content creator Fique Ayub Fique and his co-defendants associated with the @FiqueAyub YouTube channel were “unjustly enriched” by recording and posting the videos of two pranks where Ayub affected “an exaggerated Indian accent” to interrupt lectures with mocking questions, before cooking curry on a portable stovetop that...
May 18, 2026 - 06:00 | Special to National Post | National Post
May 18, 2026 - 06:00 | Lindsay Jones | The Globe and Mail