Tories highlight Carney’s 100th missed question period with cake | Page 902 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Catherine Lévesque
Publication Date: June 16, 2026 - 17:03

Stay informed

Tories highlight Carney’s 100th missed question period with cake

June 16, 2026

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney has missed so many question periods in the House of Commons that he hit a new milestone worth celebrating — or not — with a sweet treat.

The Conservatives’ question period coordinator, Eric Duncan, arrived on Tuesday with a cake with the message “Happy 100 Question Periods Missed!” surrounded by dollops of vanilla icing and rainbow sprinkles. A French translation was also provided on the cake.

“Today marks a very unfortunate milestone for Mark Carney. Today will be his 100th missed question period. He skipped out on 100 out of 136 question periods. That is completely unacceptable,” said Conservative House leader Andrew Scheer.

Carney is currently in France for the G7 Summit. While Scheer said his party takes no issue with the prime minister representing Canada at international summits, most of the question periods Carney has missed since in office happened while he was in Ottawa.

According to the Conservatives’ calculations, Carney was in Ottawa or in close enough proximity to attend 64 out of those 100 sittings to answer the opposition’s questions.

“There’s no excuse for those absences,” Scheer said. “He was literally in the building, or around the corner. He could have easily showed up and defended his government’s record.”

It is not the first time that Carney makes headlines for his infrequent presence in question period. Global News recently reported that Carney has had a much lower attendance rate than his predecessors Justin Trudeau and Stephen Harper in their first year or so in office.

“I answer questions all the time,” Carney when he was asked about his attendance earlier this spring. “We have a very strong team in this government, and I believe in the team of ministers, secretaries of state, parliamentary secretaries responding.”

Duncan said he was planning to send the cake over to the Liberal side of the aisle to let them know that the prime minister should be in question period “a lot more.”

National Post calevesque@postmedia.com

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Unpublished Newswire

 
A Quebec judge has sentenced an Inuk man to 33 months in prison for nearly beating his uncle to death last summer with a metal bar while he was under a court order to stay away from the man. Timothy Assapa, 34, who “describes violence as ‘thrilling,'” pleaded guilty to assault with a weapon and aggravated assault for attacks on his uncle, Sajuilie Assapa, on Jan. 4, 2025, and June 28, 2025. The first one involved striking his uncle on the head with a pair of scissors after they argued about alcohol, causing a cut above the hairline. In the June attack, Assapa beat his uncle to...
July 5, 2026 - 09:21 | Brandon Rudick | National Post
Gail Asper tells me quietly but firmly: “My trust has been absolutely broken.” She is energized and resolute, but notably not angry. The 66-year-old daughter of the late Israel (Izzy) Asper — the media titan and Jewish philanthropist who envisioned and heavily funded the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg — has watched with deepening dismay as the institution she helped build appears to sideline the very community that made it possible. One week ago, “Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Past and Present” opened at this national, federally funded human rights museum. It shares...
July 5, 2026 - 08:42 | Donna Kennedy-Glans | National Post