Federal Accountability Act

The Federal Accountability Act ("FedAA": French: Loi fédérale sur la responsabilité) is a statute introduced as Bill C-2 in the first session of the 39th Canadian Parliament on April 11, 2006, by the President of the Treasury Board, John Baird. The aim was to reduce the opportunity to exert influence with money by banning corporate, union, and large personal political donations; five-year lobbying ban on former ministers, their aides, and senior public servants; providing protection for whistleblowers; and enhancing the power of the Auditor General to follow the money spent by the government.

Source: Wikipedia — Federal Accountability Act (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Federal Accountability Act

The Federal Accountability Act ("FedAA": French: Loi fédérale sur la responsabilité) is a statute introduced as Bill C-2 in the first session of the 39th Canadian Parliament on April 11, 2006, by the President of the Treasury Board, John Baird. The aim was to reduce the opportunity to exert influence with money by banning corporate, union, and large personal political donations; five-year lobbying ban on former ministers, their aides, and senior public servants; providing protection for whistleblowers; and enhancing the power of the Auditor General to follow the money spent by the government.

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Source: Wikipedia "Federal Accountability Act" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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