Legislation · Canada (Federal) · Federal
C-211 — An Act to amend the Income Tax Act and the Canada Pension Plan (deeming provision)
Clarion tracks C-211 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
- 2025-06-17
- Session
- 45-1
What it does
AI plain-language summary of the official text.
Bill C-211 is a Private Member's Bill introduced in the House of Commons on June 17, 2025. It proposes amendments to the Income Tax Act and the Canada Pension Plan related to a deeming provision. The bill is currently outside the Order of Precedence, meaning it has not yet been scheduled for further debate.
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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