Minister Champagne introduces second piece of legislation to implement Budget 2025: Canada Strong

News release

May 7, 2026 – Ottawa, Ontario – Department of Finance Canada 

Yesterday, the Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Finance and National Revenue, introduced Bill C-31, Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2, the next legislative step to advance key Budget 2025: Canada Strong priorities.

In Budget 2025, the government outlined its plan to build Canada Strong. Since then, we have moved fast to: build the major infrastructure, homes, and industries that grow Canada’s economy and create lasting prosperity; empower Canadians with better careers and a more affordable life; and protect our communities, our borders, and our way of life. 

Bill C-31 builds on this momentum by introducing measures to make life more affordable and build a fairer, more integrated, and more self-reliant economy – one that creates lasting value for Canadians and stays resilient to global shocks. Those measures include:

  • Delivering automatic federal benefits for low-income individuals: Automatically filing tax returns for the 2026 tax year to reach up to 5.5 million low-income Canadians by the 2028 tax year, ensuring they can access key government benefits and manage their day-to-day costs.   
  • Facilitating automatic enrolment in the Canada Learning Bond: Making saving for education easier and fairer for Canadian families.
  • Amending the Global Minimum Tax Act: Preserving the integrity and stability of the Global Minimum Tax to ensure that all corporations pay their fair share.
  • Implementing the new Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework: Ensuring crypto platforms collect and share information about users with tax authorities, reducing tax evasion, and improving transparency.
  • Amending the National Housing and Protection of Residential Mortgage or Hypothecary Insurance Acts: Strengthening Canada’s mortgage and housing financing system so that home financing stays available, affordable, and stable for Canadians.
  • Providing immediate expensing for manufacturing or processing buildings: As part of the Productivity Super-Deduction, promoting capital investment and long-term economic growth.
  • Improving the air passenger complaints process: Making airlines more accountable for quick and fair resolution of passenger complaints by transferring responsibilities for resolving complaints to the Minister of Transport – including clear requirements for timely and transparent decisions, fair terms of compensation, and increased penalties when airlines break the rules.
  • Banning most non-compete clauses in employment contracts for federally regulated industries: Allowing Canadians to change jobs more easily and reducing worker exploitation, while improving competition in the job market.
  • Establishing the Defence Investment Agency as a stand-alone entity: Speeding up defence procurement, supporting domestic industry, and allowing for faster investments that will keep Canadians safe and strengthen our sovereignty. 

Quotes

“Our plan is clear: to build one strong Canadian economy, invest boldly in nation‑building infrastructure, put more money back in Canadians’ pockets, and protect our country’s sovereignty and its future. More than just legislation, Budget 2025 Implementation Act No. 2 is how we deliver on that plan. This is our moment to build Canada Strong – and we are doing so with every measure in this bill.”

- The Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Finance and National Revenue

Associated links

Contacts

Media may contact:

John Fragos
Press Secretary
Office of the Minister of Finance and National Revenue
john.fragos@fin.gc.ca

Media Relations 
Department of Finance Canada 
mediare@fin.gc.ca 
613-369-4000

General enquiries

Phone: 1-833-712-2292 
TTY: 613-369-3230 
E-mail: financepublic-financepublique@fin.gc.ca

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2026-05-07