MPs on both sides of parliament have completed a marathon vote on the Conservatives’ budget bill.
According to CBC News, the vote ran non-stop for more than twenty-two hours and wrapped up Thursday night. MP’s voted on an exhaustive list of amendments to Bill C-Thirty-Eight.
During the early stages of voting, the Commons voted down amendments that would have made changes to environmental regulations.
The third reading of Bill C-thirty-eight is scheduled for Monday before it goes to Senate.
The final Commons vote on the budget bill as a whole is expected as early as this coming week.
Flickr photo by: Tania Liu
The supreme court in Egypt has announced it will dissolve the lower house of parliament.
According to the BBC, the court said on Thursday that parliamentary elections held last year were unconstitutional. They said one third of the seats are illegitimate.
The decision also carries with it the possibility of fresh elections to elect the lower house of parliament. This comes on the heels of the run-off election to determine Egypt’s president this Saturday and Sunday.
The Muslim Brotherhood’s candidate in the presidential election said the decision must be respected; however other members of the group have condemned the ruling.
The Muslim Brotherhood won the three month long parliamentary elections in twenty-eleven.
A Montreal teacher has been fired after showing his Grade ten class the video believed to show the death and dismemberment of Jun Lin.
In a report by CBC News, the substitute teacher was informed of the schools board’s decision on Thursday one day after he was suspended with pay.
Students at Cavelier-de LaSalle high school voted in favour with three objecting to view the video on the morning of June fourth. A discussion about the video followed the viewing.
The school board has condemned the screening and it said it took immediate action by bringing in a crisis team to counsel students.
Students had rallied in favour of the popular teacher to protest his firing.
Judge Jacques Delisle has been found guilty of the first degree murder of his physically handicapped wife.
According to CTV News Delisle argued in court that his wife had committed suicide.
In the beginning the police accepted Delisle`s claim that his wife`s death was suicide, but further investigations proved otherwise.
The Crown stated that Delisle`s motive for killing his wife was to avoid an expensive divorce and to be with his mistress.
Read & Produced by: Carlo Spiridigliozzi
Stories by: Sarah Deshaies, Jamie Lee Gordon and Tara Brockwell
Only ten more hours left to debate Bill C-38 in parliament. According to the CBC a ten-hour time limit was passed yesterday with one hundred and fifty seven Conservatives voting yay and one hundred and thirty five opposition members voting nay.
Bill C-38 implements the Conservative’s March budget as well as seventy other laws affecting environmental regulation, employment insurance and immigration. The time limit is intended to ensure that voting is complete before parliament’s summer recess.
Opposition parties proposed over one thousand amendments to the bill last week.
This is the twenty-sixth time Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservatives have passed such legislation breaking the record held by the previous Liberal government. With the new time cap in place voting is expected to be completed tonight or early Thursday morning.

A noticeable energy surged through the city of Montreal with the political activism and unrest building with the student protests, the associated protests over Bill 78, and of course the news of an international manhunt for a suspect in a gruesome killing. However, the crowd that filled Club Lambi on June 1 would forget the outside world for a couple of hours to witness a mind-altering bill of local talent.
A recently formed Hiroshima Shadows opened the night's entertainment with a performance that set the bar for the rest of the evening. Although it was perhaps the least polished band of the night, their performance gave an indication of how great this band will likely become, and further demonstrated that everything Roy "Choyce" Vucino touches is gold. Hiroshima Shadows features Hannah Lewis on vocals and keyboards, Kieran Blake on vocals and guitar, Pierre-Luc Boily on drums, and Montreal's underground guru Mr. Vucino on bass (also serving as a musical equivalent of a foundation stone). Their set adrenalized the crowd with a punk rock / "shadow" disco hybrid, heavy in the low end of Roy's bass and Pierre-Luc's drumming. With vocal duties shared between Hannah and Kieran, the songs were plucked from several musical palettes, never pigeonholing this new band into one specific sound.
"It will be like any other Red Mass gig, but jammier..." explained Roy outside Club Lambi prior to performing his second set of the night. Adding "Disco 3000" to the Red Mass name for this gig was an indication that something would be different. It was a little more groovy, soulful (thanks to Taylor Hoodlum Stevenson guesting on vocals for a couple of songs), and yes a lot more "jammy". This was still the same shape shifting punk rock 'n’ roll beast that never fails to capture and energize an audience. In fact, I'd say the audience was left catching their breath.
With a new album due later this year, the band gave a little taste of what is to come. The set was made up primarily of new songs, jams, and familiar gems such as “Male Models”—a song that has been performed over the last couple of years, but never officially released. "Le Soleil De Glace" started the show with a build-up worthy of the invited two man horn section. The second song "U New U" emerged with a 60's pop patina. Hannah took lead vocals on "Sharp", a dark and moody disco song that seduced the audience, also indicating that Roy has found a perfect female foil in Hannah Lewis. The horns once again returning for a cacophonous breakdown resulting in what appeared to be an improvised jam.
One of the highlights of the set was "Dancing In My Grave". Guest-vocalist Taylor Hoodlum Stevenson nailed the track and perhaps raised the temperature in the room. His performance had soul to spare and was without a doubt the funkiest song of the evening. Every song was propelled by Yseal Pepin's throbbing bass lines and he was a pure pleasure to watch. This time around Pouf the Magic Drummer kept time with one of the most brutal displays on drums I have seen in a while, proving to these eyes, that he may well be the best drummer this band has ever had. Roy's guitar work never disappoints, and to hear him play you get the impression that between sleeping and eating he never really stops playing.
If this performance was any indication of the album to come, I'm hard pressed to come up with any other word but EPIC to describe it.
Although familiar with their albums, Anthologie Des 3 Perchoirs and In A Fung Day T!, this was the first time I had seen Duchess Says perform live. Damien "Sexual Chocolate" Edwards from the Long Beach, California band Crystal Antlers piqued my curiosity a couple of years ago when I met him in Toronto. He wore a Duchess Says pin on his jacket. When I explained I was from their hometown, he went on to say that after seeing them perform at a festival they were now his favorite band.
When I watched the headliners take to the stage, I thought of how hard it must be to follow Red Mass. But Duchess Says lived up to their reputation and did not disappoint. I would say I was converted, and now understood the praise put upon them. In Annie-Claude Deschênes, Duchess Says have a front woman whose stage aura is beyond hypnotic.
This band made sense to me as a live entity, their songs bopping and weaving with motorized precision. Guitar and synths meshed together to form a musical backdrop for Annie-Claude’s shamanistic performance. Keyboardist and guitarist Ismael Tremblay, guitarist and bassist Philippe Clément and percussionist Simon "Simon Says" Besre, concentrated on keeping everything in motion with little-to-no time stopping in between songs plucked from their two-album catalogue.
Annie spent a good portion of the set in and crowd-surfing above the crowd, eliminating any sort of boundary caused by having an actual stage. The cardboard chapel backdrops, after having fallen several times onto Ismael, eventually collapsed into the hands of the audience, which ensured proper destruction. As the props bent and tore to the crowd’s every move, so did the songs. At the end of their set, the band announced that they had a gift for all those in attendance, and a giant tarp with the band’s logo was revealed and laid out over heads of the crowd, providing a magic carpet from which Annie could once again join the audience and finish her punk rock sermon.
After seeing The Strange Boys, White Fence, and Ty Segall perform in May, I was left wondering if any other show this year could even come close to matching that line-up. My question was answered in the form of three local acts.
-"Oncle" Ian Macpherson co-hosts The Go-Go Radio Magic Show on Fridays from 6-8pm
"Bloom", the fourth full-length album by Beach House is a beautiful yet slightly monotonous album. I had heard the album's first single, "Myth" when the duo released it on March 7th and fell in love all over again. With their dreamy, trademark keyboards and Victoria Legrand’s androgynous vocals, the full album didn’t fail to disappoint. It was finally released May 15th via Sub Pop – perfect timing for watching the ivy grow while porch sitting these past warm Montreal nights. Legrand effortlessly creates a vocal tone that is at once joyful and sombre, weaving together a mood of contentment that is tinged with what feels like regret.When listening to Bloom in its entirety, I find that it’s easy to mistake one song for another. The duo’s intention was to make a record that was meant to be listened to as an album and each track blends together seamlessly. While this makes for a lovely listening experience, if you’re looking for variety you’re not going to find it with this record. Upon hearing “Other People” for the first time I could have sworn that I was listening to “Myth” again and felt a tinge of annoyance. However, once the chorus came in I really started to enjoy the song. That is the secret behind Bloom – Beach House was able to produce an album that seems like one hour long song, yet each track has a slight difference that once you hear it, you will want to listen to it over and over again.
FINAL MARK: B
Grand Prix weekend was marred with more student protests and increased police presence downtown.
In what police were calling “preventative measures,” thirty-six arrests were made at various metro stations across the island.
Of the thirty six, twenty eight people were eventually released.
According to CTV, knives and ski masks were found in the bags of those arrested.
Police were also present on the metro’s yellow line, the line carrying passengers to the Gilles Villeneuve track. An anti-capitalist group had planned to disrupt the metro lines. Police affirmed that a municipal regulation allows police officers to question and search people in the metro.
Saturday’s peaceful demonstrations followed into a night of confrontations between police and protesters that also led to arrests.
A variety of protesters were using the Grand Prix to publicize their causes such as those opposed to capitalism, tuition hikes, and the exploitation of women.
Flickr photo by: Pedro fait de la photo
Officials say they are well talking care of the oil that spewed in an Alberta river and lake earlier this week, according to the CBC.
The oil came from a ruptured pipeline which was luckily not flowing at the time of the release, which means only a low volume was let out.
Stephen Bart, the vice president of crude oil operations for Plains Midstream Canada, said the crews have been working on the problem 24/7 since Thursday, when they were alerted of the spill.
An estimated 3,000 barrels of oil leaked into Red Deer River, with up to a hundred people on site working on cleaning the spill.
Bart said they were able to achieve primary containment within twelve hours of the spill.
The province says while it will continue to monitor air and water quality, there's no health risk for those who live downstream of the Gleniffer reservoir, which provides more than 100,000 Albertans with drinking water.