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FederalDid not become law (session ended)40th Parliament, 1st Session

Bill S-215 explained in plain English

An Act to amend the Parliament of Canada Act (vacancies)

Federal Parliament bill summary, status, timeline, sponsor, votes, and official sources.

At a glance

Jurisdiction
Federal Parliament
Legislature / Parliament
Parliament of Canada
Session
40th Parliament, 1st Session
Bill number
Bill S-215
Full title
An Act to amend the Parliament of Canada Act (vacancies)
Current status
Did not become law (session ended)
Latest event
At second reading in the Senate
Last updated
Nov 27, 2008

Official Parliament of Canada snapshot for 40th Parliament, 1st Session. MP vote breakdowns appear when the House of Commons publishes a recorded division export for that bill. Senate and House stage details include official debate/sitting links when LEGISinfo publishes them.

Chamber
Parliament of Canada
Current Stage
At second reading in the Senate
Latest Activity
Nov 27, 2008
Plain-language explanation
In plain English (our explanation)

Our plain-language take, written for civic education.

Source: By PoliticalData.ca

AI-assisted, reviewed before publishing
Short Version

Bill S-215 amends the Parliament of Canada Act to require the Prime Minister to fill Senate vacancies within 180 days and to establish an order for issuing by-election writs when multiple House of Commons vacancies occur.

What It Means

Bill S-215 makes two changes to how Parliament handles vacant seats. First, it requires the Prime Minister to recommend someone to the Governor General to fill any Senate vacancy within 180 days. This includes vacancies that already exist when the law takes effect. The person recommended must be fit and qualified for Senate appointment. Second, it changes the rules for by-elections in the House of Commons. When more than one seat becomes vacant at the same time, by-election writs (official orders to hold elections) must be issued in the order that the Chief Electoral Officer receives the warrants for them, rather than any other order. The bill amends the Parliament of Canada Act, which sets out rules for how Parliament operates.

What This Bill Does
  • Requires the Prime Minister to recommend a qualified person to the Governor General to fill any Senate vacancy within 180 days of the vacancy occurring
  • Applies the 180-day requirement to any vacancy existing at the time the bill receives royal assent
  • Requires by-election writs in the House of Commons to be issued in the order the Chief Electoral Officer receives the corresponding warrants when multiple vacancies exist
Who Is Affected
  • The Prime Minister
  • The Governor General
  • The Chief Electoral Officer
  • Members and potential members of the Senate
  • Members and potential members of the House of Commons
  • Voters in ridings with House of Commons vacancies
Rights, Duties, Or Obligations
  • The Prime Minister must recommend a fit and qualified person to fill a Senate vacancy within 180 days
  • The Chief Electoral Officer must issue by-election writs in the order warrants are received
Important Dates
  • 180 days after a vacancy happens in the Senate is the deadline for the Prime Minister to make a recommendation
  • For any vacancy existing when the bill receives royal assent, the 180-day period begins on the date of royal assent
Uncertainties Or Limits
  • The bill does not specify what happens if the Prime Minister fails to make a recommendation within 180 days or what penalties, if any, apply
  • The bill does not define what 'fit and qualified' means for Senate appointments
  • The bill does not address whether the Governor General must accept the Prime Minister's recommendation
  • The bill does not specify consequences if by-election writs are not issued in the required order
Laws Or Regulations Affected
Parliament of Canada Act
amends

Adds new rules about how Senate vacancies must be filled and the order in which House of Commons by-election writs must be issued

Source: Sections 13.1 and 31(1.1)

Generated using AI from official bill text. Not legal advice. It is written by PoliticalData.ca for civic education, automatically checked and spot-reviewed before publishing.

Official text

Parliamentary Process

Step 1
First reading
Nov 27, 2008
Completed

Bill S-215, regarding amendments to the Parliament of Canada Act on vacancies, successfully passed its first reading in the Senate on November 27, 2008, and is now at the second reading stage.

Introduction and first reading, Nov 27, 2008
End of stage activity, Nov 27, 2008
Chamber sittings
Introduction and first reading - Nov 27, 2008

The Senate proceeded with the first reading of Bill S-215 and other legislative matters, alongside tributes and discussions on various national and international issues.

Step 2
Second reading
Date not listed
No activity

We don't have a plain-language summary for Second reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 3
Third reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Third reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 1
First reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for First reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 2
Second reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Second reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 3
Consideration in committee
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Consideration in committee yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 4
Report stage
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Report stage yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 5
Third reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Third reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Debate and sitting links point to official parliamentary sources when LEGISinfo publishes them. Any plain-language discussion summaries should be generated from those official texts and reviewed before public display.

Vote Summary

No published recorded division

This bill is still active. We only show vote counts after the legislature publishes a recorded division.

Sponsor
Wilfred P. Moore
Senator | Details not listed in current Senate roster
Jurisdiction
Federal Parliament

No published representative vote breakdown

This bill is still moving through the process. When a recorded division is published, representative positions can be listed here.

Official sources

Status, sponsor, votes, and timeline on this page are drawn from these official legislative sources and public records. Each summary above is attributed to its own source.

How this data is sourced