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Bill C-26 · Housing Supply Payments Act · Second Reading
Bill C-30 · Spring Economic Update 2026 Implementation Act · Committee (House)
Bill C-4 · Making Life More Affordable for Canadians Act · Royal Assent March 12, 2026
Bill C-31 · Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2 · Second Reading
Bill C-12 · Strengthening Canada's Immigration System and Borders Act · Royal Assent March 26, 2026
Bill C-9 · Combatting Hate Act · Passed Senate June 4, 2026
Bill C-22 · Lawful Access Act · Committee (House)
11 Legislatures Monitored · Federal + All 10 Provinces
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🪶 Indigenous & Reconciliation Active. First Reading

Final Self-Government Agreement for the Tlegohli Got’ine Act

Bill C-27 gives legal effect to the Final Self-Government Agreement negotiated by the Tlegohli Got’ine, the Government of Canada, and the Government of the Northwest Territories. It recognizes the right of the Tlegohli Got’ine — a Sahtu Dene community based in Norman Wells, NWT — to govern their own affairs, and advances reconciliation through a renewed nation-to-nation relationship. Introduced March 26, 2026 by the Minister of Crown–Indigenous Relations.

C-27
Bill Number (45th Parl.)
Mar 26, 2026
Introduced
1st Reading
Current stage
What it is
Bill C-27 is An Act to give effect to the Final Self-Government Agreement for the Tlegohli Got’ine. It turns a negotiated agreement — signed on September 18, 2025 by the Tlegohli Got’ine, the Government of Canada, and the Government of the Northwest Territories — into federal law. The agreement was reached under the Sahtu Dene and Metis Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement and sets out how the Tlegohli Got’ine will govern themselves.
Who it affects
The Tlegohli Got’ine, a Sahtu Dene people centred in Norman Wells, Northwest Territories, and represented by The Tlegohli Got’ine Government Incorporated. Once in force, the Act gives their government legal recognition to make and enforce its own laws in defined areas. More broadly, it advances Canada’s commitments to reconciliation and to implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
What changes
The Final Self-Government Agreement becomes legally binding and is given effect in federal law, with consequential amendments to other Acts so they recognize the new arrangement. The Tlegohli Got’ine gain law-making authority over matters set out in the agreement, replacing decision-making that previously sat with other governments, as part of a renewed nation-to-nation relationship built on recognition of Tlegohli Got’ine rights.
Where it stands
Bill C-27 was introduced and given first reading on March 26, 2026 by the Minister of Crown–Indigenous Relations. It is in the early stages of the legislative process: there are no recorded votes yet, and a legislative summary is being prepared by the Library of Parliament. It must still pass second reading, committee study, and third reading in the House of Commons, then move through the Senate, before Royal Assent.
Pros & Concerns
👍 Pros
Delivers on a negotiated, signed agreement and a long-standing commitment to self-government. Recognizes Tlegohli Got’ine authority over their own community and advances reconciliation. Puts UNDRIP commitments into concrete law.
👎 Concerns
Implementation details — funding, jurisdiction, and how the new government interacts with territorial and federal programs — will take time to work out. As with any self-government legislation, careful drafting of the consequential amendments matters so existing rights and services are not disrupted.
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