An Act for granting to His Majesty certain sums of money for the federal public administration for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2023
Routine supply bill. Authorizes federal departmental spending through March 31, 2023. Without supply bills the federal government cannot pay salaries or honour contracts; passage is mandatory each year. The constitutional basis sits in sections 53 and 54 of the Constitution Act, 1867: money bills must originate in the Commons and must be recommended by the Crown (the Governor General on the advice of Cabinet). The Financial Administration Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. F-11) then governs how the appropriated funds flow through the Consolidated Revenue Fund. A government that loses a supply vote loses the confidence of the House by convention; Joe Clark's Progressive Conservative minority fell on a budget vote on December 13, 1979 and Stephen Harper's Conservative minority fell on a contempt finding tied to the 2011 budget, both clear modern precedents.
Status
Quick learn
A routine supply bill. Approves federal spending up to March 31, 2023. Without it, departments couldn't pay salaries or contracts. Standard procedure each fiscal year. Without supply bills like this, departments cannot pay salaries, contracts, or grants, and a government that loses one falls by parliamentary convention. The Estimates cycle (Main Estimates each February, Supplementary Estimates A in May, B in November, C in February) is the underlying framework these acts implement.
Issues this bill touches
- Tax & Fiscal Policy
Supply bill.
Legislative history
- First reading
First reading in the House of Commons.
View source - Second reading
Second reading in the House of Commons.
View source - Third reading
Third reading in the House of Commons.
View source - Second reading
Second reading in the Senate.
View source - Third reading
Third reading in the Senate.
View source - Royal assent
Royal assent received.
View source - Introduced
Tabled in the originating chamber by the sponsor.
View source - Third reading
Final debate and vote in the originating chamber.
View source
Sponsored by
Mona FortierLIBERALOfficial source
Read full text on Parliament of Canada