Legislation · Canada (Federal) · Federal
C-206 — An Act to establish a national strategy on brain injuries
Clarion tracks C-206 before Canada (Federal) — its status, sponsor, plain-language summary, and every stage it moves through, each cited to the official record and refreshed each morning.
- Status
- Outside The Order Of Precedence
- Sponsor
- Gord Johns
- Introduced
- 2025-06-10
- Session
- 45-1
What it does
AI plain-language summary of the official text.
Bill C-206, a Private Member's Bill introduced in the 45th Parliament, proposes the establishment of a national strategy on brain injuries in Canada. The bill received first reading on June 10, 2025, and currently sits outside the Order of Precedence, meaning it has not yet been scheduled for further debate. No additional legislative stages have been completed at this time.
Passage outlook
Unlikely to pass because it's a private member's bill (which rarely passes), it's outside the order of precedence.
Historically 0–5% of comparable federal bills became law (base rate 4%, n=1067). Momentum has slowed, so that historical rate likely overstates its current odds.
If this private member's bill would create new spending, it needs a Royal Recommendation (Cabinet only) — without one, passage is effectively nil.
A private member's bill's fate hinges on its position in the Order of Precedence (a random draw) — bills low on the list often run out of calendar time.
A transparent, rule-based outlook from bill type, stage, and verified government standing — not a guaranteed prediction.
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