Parliament returns Monday, April 13
Vote #88March 25, 2026

Bill C-246: This proposed law would change the rules for sentencing people who commit sexual crimes, so they serve their sentences one after the other.

Defeated157 Yeas
169 Nays
10 Paired

What They Voted On

That the bill be now read a second time and referred to the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights .

What This Vote Is Really About

This vote was about a proposed law called Bill C-246. The goal of this law was to make sure people who commit multiple sex crimes get a longer prison sentence. Right now, a judge can decide if someone serves sentences for different crimes at the same time (concurrently) or one after the other (consecutively). Bill C-246 wanted to change this for sex crimes. If it passed, judges would have to order that sentences for multiple sex crimes be served one after the other. This could mean a much longer time in jail for offenders. Citizens should care because this law deals with how our justice system punishes serious crimes. Some people think tougher sentences will make our communities safer. Others believe there are better ways to prevent these crimes from happening in the first place. This vote was a chance for Members of Parliament to decide if they agreed with this approach to sentencing sex offenders. The bill was defeated, so the law will not change.

Related Bill

C-246

Tougher Penalties for Sex Crimes

This proposed law wants tougher punishments for sex crimes. If someone is found guilty of multiple sex crimes, they would have to serve the sentences for each crime one after the other. This means the person would spend a longer time in jail overall.

Introduced Sep 23, 2025·Last discussed Mar 25, 2026
Conservative
Rachael Thomas
Conservative
Did not
become law
How Canada Voted
How the House Voted

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Speaker
Speaker's Left
Speaker's Right
Yea (157)
Nay (169)
Paired (10)
Did not vote (4)
Did Not Vote (4)
Liberal: 2Conservative: 1NDP: 1
Joël Godin (Conservative)
Heather McPherson (NDP)
Tom Osborne (Liberal)
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal)