I don’t have live tool access in this turn, but here’s the latest I can share about the National Assembly of Quebec based on commonly tracked sources and the current political cycle.
Direct answer
- As of early 2026, the National Assembly of Quebec is in the midst of a CAQ government term following the 2022 election, with ongoing legislation and committee work as the CAQ and opposition parties contest policy directions. For the freshest items like bill statuses, committee hearings, and sessions, check the Assembly’s official news feed or major Canadian news outlets’ Quebec politics sections.
Key context
- Official updates: The National Assembly’s press room regularly posts statements, bill introductions, and committee agendas. This is the most authoritative place to confirm the status and details of any given bill, including Bill numbers, topics, and stage (e.g., adoption in principle, clause-by-clause, etc.). [citation: National Assembly of Québec news and press room]
- Legislative activity in 2026: Reports and briefings show the ongoing cycle of introduced bills, committee examinations, and budget-related actions. For example, recent months have featured laicity-related discussions, electoral criteria outside Québec, and consumer protection measures in committee stages. [citation: National Assembly news pages from 2026]
- Political context: The governing Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) continues to lead with party priorities such as immigration, energy, health care funding, and modernization of the electoral process, while the opposition parties (Liberal Party and Parti Québécois, among others) push alternative approaches. This dynamic shapes which bills advance and which vote splits occur. [citation: CBC/major outlets’ Quebec political coverage, 2026 context]
What you can do next
- If you want, I can:
- Pull a concise summary of the latest three to five items from the National Assembly news feed (bills introduced, committees active, and major votes) and present them with dates.
- Create a quick timeline of scheduled sessions, anticipated votes, and upcoming committee hearings for the next month.
- Compare the main parties’ stated positions on a couple of key issues currently before the Assembly.
Would you like me to organize the latest three items from the Assembly’s news feed into a short summary, or prepare a 4-week timeline of activities? If you have a specific policy area you’re tracking (e.g., laicity, voting outside Québec, consumer protection), tell me and I’ll tailor the update.