Featured
House member appears naked during virtual meeting
A Canadian MP has apologised to colleagues after appearing completely starkers during a virtual meeting of the House of Commons.
William Amos, who has represented the Quebec district of Pontiac since 2015 for the Liberal Party, is seen behind a desk between the Quebec and Canadian flags, with what appears to be a mobile phone preserving his modesty.
A screenshot of Mr Amos’s disrobed display was obtained by news agency The Canadian Press – it was originally visible only to parliament members and staffers on an internal video conference feed.
In an email statement apologising for his bare-faced cheek, Mr Amos described his state of undress as “an unfortunate error”.
“My video was accidentally turned on as I was changing into my work clothes after going for a jog.
“I sincerely apologise to my colleagues in the House of Commons for this unintentional distraction. Obviously, it was an honest mistake and it won’t happen again.”
Raising a point of order, Claude DeBellefeuille, an MP for the opposition Bloc Quebecois party, suggested that parliamentary decorum requires male parliament members to wear a jacket and tie – and a shirt, underwear and trousers.
Speaker Anthony Rota has reminded MPs to always be vigilant when they are near a camera and microphone.
Sky News
-
Latest3 days agoMakinde declares 2027 presidential bid under PDP–APM alliance
-
Featured3 days agoObasanjo faults Tinubu’s economic reforms, calls them necessary but poorly designed
-
Business4 days agoAnger, debate trail proposed $1.25bn loan amid concerns over Nigeria’s debt surge
-
Featured3 days agoWike dismisses political speculation over meeting with APC Chairman Yilwatda
-
Latest6 days agoWike loyalists dominate As APC clears 33 aspirants for Rivers Assembly primaries, 65 disqualified
-
Latest3 days agoWike says Makinde’s presidential ambition dead on arrival
-
Comments and Issues3 days agoPolitical Parties Primaries: Consensus or Coronation?
-
Business4 days agoNigeria’s 2026 debt servicing hits $11.6bn as Tinubu decries global financial inequity

