Senators defy Trudeau, propose amendments to federal budget bill
OTTAWA — The Senate voted Tuesday to delete a so-called escalator tax on booze from the federal government’s budget, defying Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s insistence that only the elected House of Commons has authority over budgetary matters.
Senators voted 46-32 late Tuesday to accept the report of the Senate’s national finance committee, which earlier in the day passed a series of amendments aimed at removing the government’s plan to increase the federal excise tax on beer, wine and spirits automatically by the rate of inflation each year.
The amendments came one day after the Senate narrowly defeated a motion that would have carved out provisions dealing with the creation of a new infrastructure bank into a separate bill.
The committee — whose membership includes independent Sen. Andre Pratte, author of the motion to split the bill — did not propose any changes to the infrastructure bank provisions.


