C-273 , 41st Parliament, 1st session June 2, 2011, to September 13, 2013

An Act to amend the Criminal Code (cyberbullying)
Bill type
Private Member’s Bill
This bill was not proceeded with on March 27, 2013

Progress

End of stage activity
Introduction and first reading, September 19, 2011
Chamber sittings
Sitting date Debates (Hansard)
September 19, 2011
End of stage activity
Second reading and referral to committee, June 6, 2012
Placed on the order of precedence on February 23, 2012
Chamber sittings
Sitting date Debates (Hansard)
April 24, 2012
Sitting 109
Major speeches
Show major speeches at second reading
June 5, 2012
June 6, 2012
Sitting 135
Agreed to (Vote 272)
2nd reading and referral to committee - JUST
Report stage
Not reached
Third reading
Not reached

Senate

First reading
Not reached
Second reading
Not reached
Third reading
Not reached

Notes

Pursuant to Standing Order 97.1, the committee presented a report to the House of Commons recommending that the Bill not be further proceeded with — February 28, 2013

Concurred in — March 27, 2013

Details

Recorded votes

House of Commons

Vote 272 — June 6, 2012
Result:
Tie
2nd reading of Bill C-273, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (cyberbullying)
Yeas:
144
Nays:
144
Paired:
0
Total:
288
Vote 654 — March 27, 2013
Result:
Agreed To
19th Report of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights
Yeas:
244
Nays:
38
Paired:
0
Total:
282

Senate

To view the complete list of standing votes that have taken place in the Senate, please refer to the Votes page of the Senate of Canada website.

Speaker's rulings and statements

There are currently no Speaker's rulings and statements.

Major speeches at second reading

House of Commons

Speech date Speech Member of Parliament
April 24, 2012 Sponsor’s speech(Sitting 109) Hedy Fry (Liberal)
April 24, 2012 Response speech(Sitting 109) Robert Goguen (Conservative)
April 24, 2012 Response speech(Sitting 109) Dany Morin (NDP)

About

More on this bill

From the Library of Parliament

The Library of Parliament’s research publications provide non-partisan, reliable and timely information and analysis on current and emerging issues, legislation and major public policy topics.

Further reading

Export as: JSON XML

For more data options, please see Open Data

Top of page