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C-251Outside the Order of Precedence

Bill C-251 — Law to Ban Goods Made with Forced or Child Labor

Ban on Forced Labor Goods

Introduced Oct 21, 2025
Summary

This proposed law, C-251, aims to keep products made using forced labor or child labor out of Canada. It would change the rules for customs officers at the border. They would have more power to stop goods suspected of being made with forced or child labor from entering the country. This change would affect businesses that import goods into Canada. It would also affect consumers who buy those goods. If the proposed law passes, companies will need to be more careful about where their products come from. They'll need to make sure their supply chains don't involve forced or child labor. This proposed law matters because it could help protect vulnerable workers around the world. It sends a message that Canada does not support these unethical labor practices. It also encourages companies to be more responsible and transparent about how their products are made.

What MPs Are Saying
Bloc Québécois
Simon-Pierre Savard-TremblayBloc QuébécoisSupports

I think Canada's system to stop goods made with forced labor is not working. My bill would make importers prove goods are not made with forced labor, like in the U.S., because we don't want to buy goods made with blood.

Bill Timeline
Introduced in the House
Oct 21, 2025
Where This Lands on Key Issues

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Bill Quality
Solid

This proposed law aims to stop goods made with forced or child labor from entering Canada by creating lists of countries and companies of concern. It puts the responsibility on importers to prove their goods aren't made with forced labor, which is a good step, but relies heavily on future regulations to define key processes.

Things to Watch For

  • The specific steps importers must take to check their supply chains are not yet defined.
  • It's unclear how often the government will update the lists of countries and companies.
  • The law doesn't specify what penalties importers will face if they fail to meet the requirements.
  • The process for removing a country or company from the lists isn't fully transparent.
  • The law depends on cooperation between multiple government departments, which could slow things down.
Progress

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