With your indulgence, I would just like to congratulate all of the members and witnesses whom we heard on our week of travelling from coast to coast. I thought there were great questions and even better answers from many of our witnesses. I had the pleasure of being there for Quebec City, Toronto and Winnipeg. I'm sure all stops were great.
As I said earlier, I just want to make sure my comments are anchored in the motion. I'll just read the first line of the motion:
Celebrates the Canada Pension Plan as the foundation of a secure and dignified retirement for tens of millions of Canadians and a pillar of Canada’s economy;
My remarks will focus mainly on Canada's economy per the motion.
We are of course, in an extremely difficult economic time, really with extremes that we haven't seen since the Great Depression. Philip Cross, of course, the noted academic and statistician has said that we have the worse GDP since the Great Depression. We're actually contracting. I believe it's per person GDP. Those numbers are obscured a little bit.
For those Canadians listening at home, they may be confused when they hear the Liberals say, we had an increase in GDP. Our increase in population is obscuring the actual economic numbers because while the absolute numbers are higher, the actual per Canadian numbers are lower. This government is in some respects successfully obscuring the truth. But you know what, Canadians feel it. The people of Northumberland—Peterborough South are very much aware of the economic times.
We see other indicators such as food banks being at record levels. I believe it's two million Canadians per month who visit food banks. I heard a statistic just this morning that fully a third of food bank attendees, customers—I guess "clients" may be the best way to refer to them—are new. These are folks who have never been to a food bank before. I heard a great interview this morning of one of the individuals who is in charge of a food bank.
You can imagine the energy, exhaustion and the stress it would take for someone who had never been to a food bank and probably never thought they would ever go to a food bank. Yet this government, instead of focusing on these very critical issues, is obsessed with scoring political points, to sow division. We all know from the first Prime Minister Trudeau of policies that, if not a willful, are certainly negligent, and of efforts that have alienated large portions of our country. Traditionally that might be viewed as western Canada, but I can tell you that in rural Ontario it's the same thing.
The folks in my riding, in part of rural Canada, very much feel like they are alienated and aren't thought about or cared about by this government. You see that even more so in the carve-out from the carbon tax. Yes, I'm glad that the got the memo from the Atlantic members of caucus who said that they can't campaign on this. We can't go back. We can't face our residents with a carbon tax at $80 a tonne.
I'll just remind people on the record as well, because there was some confusion—I'm sure it was honest confusion—on the road when I said carbon taxes had quadrupled. In 2019, the carbon tax was $20 per tonne. It is now $80. Four times $20 is $80. Sorry, it will be in the spring of 2024. I should correct that. We have the quadrupling of the carbon tax and in many cases a very meagre rebate coming back the other way.
We get this exemption, this carve-out, this acknowledgement that in fact the carbon tax is leading to an affordability crisis, as we heard from Tiff Macklem. He shared with us that 16% of inflation is actually directly because of the carbon tax and that 33% of inflation over target is directly because of the carbon tax. Those are all numbers.
I'm sure this is honest confusion, but I have heard many Liberal and even NDP members in the House, and even in this very committee, get very confused on that point and say things like it's only 1.5%. That's just not true. That's not what the governor said. The governor said, and he confirmed it, that it was actually 60 full basis points, which is 16% of inflation.
There is no doubt that by having that exemption, that carve-out only for Atlantic Canada.... I should be fair, though. I want to be completely transparent and make sure that we have all the facts. It does apply to other people across the country who heat their homes with oil. The reality is that the majority of people who heat their homes with oil are out on the east coast, which is where the 's caucus was very upset. It's going to make many Canadians feel left out in the cold, literally and figuratively.
It's the logic, Mr. Chair, that really.... I don't understand it. I hear say, you don't understand. Fuel oil is really bad for the environment, so we have to take the carbon tax off it. But then that same guy will say, you don't understand, gasoline is really bad for the environment so we have to quadruple the carbon tax. There's a complete gap of logic.
Every time I hear this debate, not even as a partisan or as a Conservative but as someone who studied philosophy at university, I don't understand the logic of it. Either the carbon tax leads to less of something, and so we should put it particularly heavily on bad things, or it doesn't, and then we should remove it all and, instead, allow Canadians to have the resources they need to make the decisions they need to. Actually, that brings me to Bill .
As some of you might be aware, I originated Bill —it's a private member's bill—back in 2019. That was the predecessor to Bill , which was to remove the carbon tax from propane and natural gas for farmers. This would affect farmers from coast to coast to coast.
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Thank you very much. I'll anchor my comments to make sure that the connection is clear.
The carbon tax is having a huge impact on the economy, and we actually heard that testimony. You don't have to take my word for it, Mr. Chair. You can take Tiff Macklem's word for it. The number one problem with the economy—which I think is universally agreed upon by Bill Morneau, John Manley and —is inflation.
We heard testimony from the Governor of the Bank of Canada that 16% of that inflation or 33% above target is directly related to the carbon tax, so one really can't talk about the economy without talking about the carbon tax.
I know that might offend the sensibilities of some Liberals because this is the signature piece that has really—it hasn't really accomplished anything on the environment. In fact, all it's doing is actually, as I had the opportunity to talk about a little bit, pushing Canadian companies to either leave fully or to put their manufacturing offshore so that they don't have to pay a carbon tax.
In places like Guangdong province or in West Virginia, where they may rely heavily on coal, they don't have to pay the carbon tax, which means that instead of having clean Canadian natural gas powering industry relatively efficiently, we have the same products being made in Guangdong province, in West Virginia and elsewhere in the world where they power with coal.
I would much rather have the hydroelectric dam in Niagara Falls powering and creating manufacturing in Ontario as opposed to having coal in the outskirts of Beijing and around other industrial areas where they don't have the same clean tech that we do here in Canada.
Getting back to the bill I was talking about, which was Bill , agriculture is a primary part of the economy, and I think one of the most critical parts of the economy. We want to talk a little bit about how carbon tax interrelates with agriculture, both of which are critical to the economy.
I had the great pleasure of introducing Bill in Parliament in 2019, which was a bill to exempt natural gas and propane from the carbon tax regime for farmers. As I said, it would affect farmers from coast to coast to coast, but particularly those who are drying grain. This was on the heals of—excuse the language; it's the term they use in agriculture circles—“the harvest from hell”. It was a very wet harvest, which created a very moist grain and corn. Individuals had to pay tens of thousands of dollars in carbon tax. That continues to this day, and that was at $20 per tonne. As I said, it's been quadrupled now to $80 per tonne. We heard great testimony on the road. I hope that members of the government, particularly, were listening to CAPP and other expert witnesses.
We took that all the way to the Senate, Mr. Chair. We got it all the way there, and unfortunately, called his unnecessary $600 million election, so it stalled there in the Senate.
To my great relief and admiration, my great colleague brought it back in the form of Bill . I might say that Mr. Lobb actually improved the bill to include barn heating amongst other small but important amendments that he made to that bill.
We're here now again. It's back in the Senate. Unfortunately, the Liberal government in the so-called independent Senate, and I do say “so-called”, is utilizing pressure on the senators it controls.
They can call them Liberals. They can call them whatever they want to call them. They listen to their master in , and they are currently stalling that bill.
One of the reasons I think they might be stalling it is that the environment minister, , has said that if there's one more carve-out, he will resign as environment minister. That carve-out, I believe, is coming.
We have the support there, so I would call on the to.... If he has to choose between his and Canadian agriculture, the choice is easy. You go with Canadian agriculture. I'm sure Mr. Guilbeault, despite his criminal record, is eminently employable. I believe he'll be just fine, going forward.
The question is on the carbon tax. We should have farmers, and will likely have farmers, as exemptive, as long as the Liberal senators don't hold it up too much.
By the way, to anyone listening, please write your Liberal MP—
I think it actually is self-evident that the carbon tax is affecting farmers, and agriculture is a big part of the economy. If this member is saying somehow that agriculture is not part of the Canadian economy, I wish he would just come out and say that, because my farmers certainly feel differently than that.
Perhaps, Mr. Chair, I might speculate that maybe their lack of respect for farmers is leading to the extreme food insecurity that millions of Canadians are facing right now. I firmly disagree with the member that agriculture is not.... I believe agriculture is part of the economy, and I'm going to continue to talk about it. It says it right here—“a pillar of Canada's economy”—so I'll continue to talk about it.
Talking about agriculture this year, the testimony we heard to this very finance committee in Winnipeg, from agriculture groups and farmers themselves, was no doubt.... They agreed that probably the best solution is not any more carve-outs, but to cancel the carbon tax once and for all. When you think about it, is there any other button this government could hit that would reduce inflation by 16% tomorrow, and from being 33% above target? What other policy lever would be that effective in fighting inflation? Honestly, I mean this. When I no longer have the floor, what's their answer to reducing inflation? I have a policy right now that will reduce the rate of inflation by 16% and 33%.
Although I agree with most of Mr. Macklem's testimony on the impact of carbon tax on inflation, it should be pointed out that he just talked about the direct impact, and he was only talking about fuel. That's not even the full impact on inflation; it's actually just part of it. The other thing he said.... I know members across the aisle, whom I respect, have said, “Well, yes, Phil, but it's only for one year”—and it's true that he did say that. But the reality is the carbon tax is set to increase all the way to 2030, to $170 per tonne, which means it will have an impact on inflation every year until 2030. So, it doesn't stop this year. The impact on inflation will continue to go forward, because when you cancel the carbon tax, you eliminate not only the carbon tax now, but the future increases as well. That's a question I'm looking forward to putting to Governor Macklem going forward, because it is clear, basic logic on that.
When you look at the overall divisive policies of this government and the carbon tax carve-out, what you see is that the carbon tax is getting more and more holes in it. In fact, it's almost untenable going forward, because you have the heating oil exemption; you'll have the farmer exemption, hopefully, soon; and then there are other exemptions that are not in there, which I don't understand quite why. No one has been affected by the affordability crisis more than persons with disabilities. Why should there not be a carbon tax exemption for persons with disabilities?
On that, despite the fact that we're 1,000 days from the introduction of legislation with respect to the Canada disability benefit, and it's been over one year since the enabling legislation, we still don't have it funded. This government has to be fair to persons with disabilities, and we heard great testimony on that, with respect. We are now “double punishing” persons with disabilities, who unfortunately, and to the great criticism of our society, are often at the lowest quintile of economic performance. This is not a reflection on them; it's a reflection on us as politicians.
I'm hoping that the fall economic statement finally funds this benefit, which I believe had unanimous support in the House of Commons. But now, in addition to that, we're going to charge individuals a carbon tax, which is very difficult.
Canadians who are most economically vulnerable in general are often hurt disproportionately by regressive taxes like the GST and the carbon tax. I had the opportunity to talk to a poverty advocate. He said that, in his experience, only 4% of those who are most financially vulnerable, those at the bottom of the economic spectrum, file their income taxes. For those individuals making an income of over $20,000 to $25,000, they are paying taxes, and it's a net economic loss. For those unfortunately not reaching that threshold, or even sometimes higher, they are in receipt of net benefits.
For example, if individuals who have had difficult economic times, for whatever reason, do not file their income tax returns, which according to that poverty advocate is 96% of them, they don't get the carbon tax rebate. However, the reality is, on the meagre earnings they carve out—and I'm sure they are doing their best to make more but for whatever reason, obstacles and barriers are in their way that I'm sure are beyond their control—they have to pay carbon tax. If they are paying rent, they are either paying it directly or paying it indirectly through heating costs. They are probably using some type of transportation that likely requires some type of fossil fuel, and once again, they are paying for that in dollars.
We had further testimony from the City of London as well, and they talked about how difficult it was. That, Mr. Chair, was some of the more startling testimony about the number of individuals who lost their lives on the city streets in London. It was deeply moving for myself and, I'm sure, for the other members. They agreed that one thing we could do as parliamentarians would be to reduce the cost of heating. Many of the organizations that provide solace, or care, or respite to individuals who find themselves unhomed have to pay the carbon tax. That is at the cost of providing more benefits to individuals who are in the most difficult circumstances we could imagine. Instead of buying extra winter coats, they are having to pay for the carbon tax.
It's incredibly difficult for me to understand why a government that has mired our country in a housing crisis, where mortgages are up two or three times, where rent is up two times, and that's if you can find a place.... In some communities in my riding, like Cobourg and Port Hope, they are facing vacancy rates of less than 1%, so even if you have the $2,000 or $2,500 a month to pay for housing, it just doesn't exist. I just cannot understand why the government continues to go in the direction of making life more difficult.
Quite frankly, the root of a lot of those issues is our productivity crisis. Canada, unfortunately, is ranked near the bottom of the OECD with respect to productivity. I hope, in the fall economic statement, they are looking through a lens of productivity. If I were advising the —maybe she's listening, but I don't know—I would put every single economic policy through a productivity lens. In some cases, there might be things that outrank productivity, but, for everything this government does, they should look at the productivity of it, because even inflation is affected by productivity.
Of course, we've heard a lot from the Governor of the Bank of Canada Tiff Macklem, who talked about inflation and the effect of demand on inflation. However, there are two sides to it. There are two sides to the ledger. There's both demand and supply. What the Governor of the Bank of Canada is attempting to do is reduce demand. He's trying to get fewer dollars chasing goods. He's doing that mainly by talking about monetary policy, reducing the money supply and increasing interest rates. That reduces the money. He's even, unprecedentedly.... I have to admit, I was a little taken aback at the finance committee that he was so forthright. Good on him for calling for the federal government, which was spending at a growth rate of 3.5%, to bring it down to under 2%. Otherwise, it would be at cross-purposes or unhelpful to his efforts.
There's the other side. There's the demand side. Slowing demand is painful. Slowing demand increases interest rates, which makes mortgages more expensive. It also causes unemployment and puts you on that path towards recession and maybe even “stagflation”.
Now, there's another way. There's another side of the ledger. We call that “supply”. The study of that is called “supply-side economics”. If we can increase the number of goods, society becomes more prosperous. It doesn't come with the pain that reducing demand does. In fact, it's the exact opposite. If you increase supply, you increase economic opportunities for everyone. You increase prosperity. You increase the wealth of the nation. You increase the size of the pie. What I firmly believe this government needs to do, not just to combat inflation now....
We could be in for, as Tiff Macklem and other economists have commented, structural high inflation, meaning we're simply not producing enough goods to meet the demand we have, especially with the large population growth we have. Rather than tamping down demand by saying, “Canadians need to do with less and be happy about it”—which seems to be the calling words of the other side—I believe Canadians can produce more, make more and be more prosperous.
When we increase economic growth—it's been proven over and over again, from JFK to Brian Mulroney—we help the most vulnerable. It's when we get that economic squeeze in supply.... It's not the wealthy in our society. It's not the millionaires who suffer. They'll be just fine. When you're making a million bucks a year and lose 10% of your income, it's probably not a good time. I've never earned a million dollars, but it's probably not a good time. However, if you're making $10,000 a year and lose 10% of your income, you're probably not going to eat some days. It's the most vulnerable who get crushed.
Actually, once again, Governor Macklem came out and pretty much said this. Governor Macklem called inflation “a tax that disproportionately affects the most vulnerable members of society.” Once again, I was surprised by Governor Macklem's candour on the topic. I look forward to having him back here again so he can amplify these comments, because inflation is an incredibly corrosive force on our economy. It waters down the wealth of Canadians.
I understand that the governor has to do what he has to do right now to reduce inflation, which is increase interest rates. His job is going to be made harder, meaning he'll have to increase interest rates more if this government can't get their spending under control. In fact, Scotiabank said, in a recent report, that actually a full $700 of the average mortgage is the direct result of this government's profligate spending. In that same report, I believe, they said that investment in housing is down 14%, meaning that we don't have more houses coming online.
We are welcoming newcomers, which is fantastic and great, but we owe it to them as well as to individuals who were born in Canada, to enable them to afford housing. If we can't deliver the housing for newcomers and all Canadians, that's devastating. Not being able to afford a house isn't just that you don't get a lawn; oftentimes people choose not to have families at that point because they just don't have any place to put their children. We are causing all sorts of social and economic pain by not having the appropriate housing plan in place.
Our leader has come up with a common-sense housing plan to reduce taxes, to reduce red tape and to incentivize municipalities to get more housing starts out the door, but right now we're going the wrong way. In fact, in testimony before this very finance committee, the CMHC said that, no, the current policies will not bridge the housing gap, which means we have another nail in the structural inflation coffin.
Our productivity issues are reducing our supply of pretty much everything and now we have housing.... We are unable to increase the number of houses that we need, which would increase housing going forward.
Then on top of that, we're also limiting the ability to make use of our own natural resources. Of course, a large portion of inflation in CPI is actually fuels, such as gasoline, diesel. Because we are limiting our ability to be self-sufficient—even though we have clean, great Canadian natural gas, Canadian energy—the impact of that is we will be increasingly dependent on other countries, meaning we will be dependent on world markets with respect to future fuel prices, which will leave us exposed to a shock in energy prices. This government, in many ways, is creating the perfect storm for structural high inflation.
We need to have a common-sense plan to get this economy back on the rails. Our has said very clearly that CPP is something that we believe should continue to be national in scope—with, of course, the noted exemption of Quebec. We would encourage Albertans and Alberta to stay in CPP, but we do have trouble with the language, particularly the third line of Ms. Bendayan's third line in there, third paragraph.
I would like to move an amendment at this point to delete that and replace it with the following, “The Liberal government's policies such as the carbon tax and Bill are lead to greater division in our country.”
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I will try to be as relevant to the amendment as my colleague just was to the motion—maybe more so. We'll see.
Look, I think it's important to state that I'm quite satisfied with the motion as it stood. I don't see any particular need to amend the motion, particularly not in the way that my colleague has proposed.
If I understand correctly, the reason why we're not on the housing study is that my Conservative colleagues take exception to the phrase “Premier Danielle Smith's dangerous plan”. I think it is pretty clear, if you look at some of the public domain polling, that a majority of Albertans are very seriously concerned about the prospect of leaving the Canada pension plan.
I think it's pretty clear, if you've read the coverage of this particular proposal by various media outlets, that it's something the Alberta government dreamt up in order to try to create some political leverage. I think it is dangerous to stake the pension futures of Canadian workers across the country on a political gambit to try to wrest things out of Ottawa. I think a government that is trying to act in the interests of its people doesn't politicize their pensions in that way.
The Canada pension plan has an excellent track record of, frankly, great returns. I think there are lots of people who would like to see, in their personal investment portfolio, returns of the kind that the CPP has seen. I think they've averaged about 10% over the last 10 years—of course, it's been a very tumultuous 10 years. Until interest rates went up it was pretty hard to get a 10% return on much of anything. There are always debates about what the Canada pension plan invests in, and how much it invests, and all the rest. I don't think there should be any debate about the efficacy of the CPPIB in securing a good return for Canadian pensioners.
I don't take exception to this. What I would say to my colleagues is that not long ago we passed a motion objecting to the HSBC-RBC merger. We did that because even though there were some folks.... If memory serves, I don't think the Liberals voted on that particular proposal. They didn't oppose it, but they didn't support it either. I think what's notable about that, notwithstanding the merits of abstention—I won't speak to that at the moment—was that we got to make a decision as a committee. I get that there are some folks around the table who want to defend Danielle Smith more than they want to study housing. That's not the point of view of everyone around the committee table. Maybe we'll find out that it is—I don't know. The point is that we'll know when we have the vote.
I don't think that suspending the work that this committee was managing to do in a constructive way on the housing file.... Something that we haven't seen enough of is constructive, productive work. This is in order to provide political cover for Danielle Smith, who, as I say, is doing something that is dangerous, risky and in my opinion not motivated by the right reasons. I think that is a mistake.
I'd be very glad to see us come to a vote. As I say, when it came to the RBC-HSBC merger, it wasn't that we didn't have a consensus...and that's not the way that we operate in Parliament, in any event.... You often hear Conservatives talk about the wonder of majority democracy and 50% plus one, and all of that, but 50% plus one only matters if you get to have a vote. Now, when they don't like it they say you need to have a consensus. When they do like it, then 50% plus one will do. Which is it? Is it 50% plus one, or is consensus-based decision-making?
If the Conservatives want consensus-based decision-making to be the way we do things on Parliament Hill, surely they'll have to carry a very different attitude and posture into committee meetings and the House of Commons than they have been, for as long as I can remember. I would say their posture is not one that promotes consensus decision-making. I've been part of organizations that operate on a consensus-based model, and the discussions around the table look very different.
If the commitment is to 50% plus one, then so be it. I'm not advocating for a change to consensus-based decision-making. I'm just saying if you have and you support a 50% plus one model, the only way that is functional is if you allow for votes to happen, and what the Conservatives are doing is essentially imposing a consensus-based decision-making model on the committee by refusing to allow for a vote when they don't agree with the motion.
I am to take from this that the only way we're going to have votes around here is if the Conservatives already like what the motion has to say.
As a New Democrat, I know very well what it means to lose votes and, nevertheless, be committed to an institution in which I don't always win based on the rules—but I don't take my ball and go home. I don't refuse having business happen simply because I don't like all of the business that's being conducted. I focus on the next battle.
People are free to take whatever position they want around the table. What I don't like is a position that says, unless we like what's in the motion, there won't be any votes. And I will say, for as much as I have disagreements with my Liberal colleagues from time to time, what I'm reading in the tea leaves is that they weren't thrilled about the RBC-HSBC merger motion at committee. I don't know; I'll leave that for them to say. They didn't vote against it. They didn't vote for it, but they did allow the vote to happen, and I don't see that we need to sit here much longer, provided that we can allow a vote to happen.
Then we will know the will of the committee, as we came to know the will of the committee on the RBC-HSBC merger, and we will move on from there. The reason we're not moving on is that the Conservatives are doing Danielle Smith's dirty work at this table because they don't like the idea that a committee of the House of Commons would criticize her.
I don't think that's the threshold here. We're allowed to have votes on these kinds of things, or at least we should be.
If need be, I can say more about the amendment but certainly on the main motion, I'm happy to proceed to a vote. I think it is fine as it stands. I don't think the amendment improves the motion in any way, nor do I think it helps us get closer to a consensus. If that's indeed what the Conservatives are looking for, I don't see this amendment as having contributed to that at all.
I do know that when the motion was first moved there was some talk about trying to find an amendment and come closer to a consensus. I've been willing to listen with an open ear on that. This amendment has not been part of those conversations, and it is clearly designed not to bring the committee closer to any kind of consensus.
There is a little bit of disappointment on that front, to be sure, that protecting Danielle Smith's political hide is going to be more important to federal Conservatives around this table than approaching consensus, but I'll leave it now to my Conservative colleagues to carry on talking.
Thank you.
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Thank you very much, Chair.
Thanks, everyone, for allowing me to be here and speak on this important motion.
We know very clearly that the motion my colleague moved is really about division and, as he mentioned, Cumberland—Colchester is in Atlantic Canada and has been significantly affected by the divisive carbon tax and the negative impact it's had on the people I represent. Certainly, it is a time when we have had more outcry from citizens on one policy than anything else, mostly because, of course, they cannot afford to heat their homes or house themselves and feed themselves, and this is incredibly distressing.
I was a family physician for 26 years, and certainly some people questioned my sanity for leaving that and coming here as a politician, leaving a well-respected profession to come here to do something quite different. That said, having had very deep relationships with many people over a quarter of a century plus, you begin to realize the pain Atlantic Canadians are feeling at the current time is disproportionate to any other time. Certainly, in my adult life, never before do I remember people going in droves to the food bank. Indeed, the food bank in my particular riding, the food bank in Truro, had to reach out to the county to ask them to pay their mortgage, first of all, because their mortgage rates were incredibly high—which we know is driven by the reckless spending of the NDP-Liberal coalition government—but also because the demand at the food bank was more than ever, such that they couldn't meet the demand while meeting the payments on their mortgage.
When you begin to look at those realities of life and the fact that one dear little old lady called.... I spoke with her and she said the following. In fact, there are two stories that I think are very, very important in telling about the division we're seeing in this country. This one lady called and said she got up in the morning—she lived in a mobile home—she turned on the heat so it would heat up, she got something to eat, and she then went back to bed with her clothes on and pulled the covers up until suppertime when things got cold again. She then turned on the furnace again, warmed up the house, had something to eat and then went back to bed. That was how she spent her days last winter over and over and over again. When you begin to understand that's how she spent her days, it becomes very unfulfilling.
I think the other thing another lady made very clear was a concept that she called “ungrocery”, which, to me, was something that's not a real word. That being said, it was incredibly disheartening to hear her story that she said she would get her grocery cart, go around the supermarket, pick out the things she wanted, realize she could not afford them and then do the opposite, taking things out of her cart such that she would have a bill at the end of the day she could afford. When you begin to look at those things, it becomes very, very difficult in the country to understand the division this NDP-Liberal coalition has created.
The other thing when we talk about division is that we understand that in rural Atlantic Canada many people still live in single-family houses and heat their homes with oil. That becomes a difficult situation. We know that the cost of home heating fuel has skyrocketed under this NDP-Liberal coalition, but the sad thing that goes along with it that has helped create this division is the fact that a company called Sustainable Marine Energy had a tidal power project, part of which was based in the great riding of Cumberland—Colchester, but because the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, run by the NDP-Liberal coalition, refused to provide them direction on how to go forward they had to abandon it.
The difficulty, of course, with that is in the Bay of Fundy we have the highest tides in the world, the most potential, and the potential there would suggest there is a possibility that when harnessed the tidal power in the Bay of Fundy would actually be able to power all of Atlantic Canada, provide every person there with the energy they need at a reasonable cost. Sustainable Marine Energy was the only company in the history of attempting to harness tidal power to have the ability to actually put electricity back into the grid.
When the NDP-Liberal coalition government refused to provide forward direction, I took the opportunity to speak to the director of Sustainable Marine. It was really quite fascinating. He was very excited. His company developed a new style of ship platform that was able to place its tidal power harnessing equipment on top of the water. We had an incredible discussion.
The people from FORCE were there, which is the federal government arm of monitoring with respect to tidal power projects. Really, of course, the concern people may have had was how many fish were actually harmed by the process of harnessing tidal power. They had underwater listening devices and video devices, and the only event that was close to being harmful was that a fish swam through the turbines once. It wasn't injured. It wasn't hit. It wasn't affected in any way, shape or form. Those comments were echoed by the federal government monitoring arm, FORCE, as well. It was very clear that the method proposed by Sustainable Marine was not harming fish at the particular site.
When we look at this, we have a federal government that is harming the ability of Atlantic Canadians to provide energy into the grid, to actually provide enough energy, as I said, for the entirety of the Atlantic provinces in a sustainable manner, which would free them from the need to buy it elsewhere of course.
When we talk about emissions, it always fascinates me. When we think about tidal energy, there are no emissions—zero. How much better could it get than that? You don't harm the local fish environment, and you have zero emissions, with a possibility to provide enough energy for all of Atlantic Canada. The only thing standing in the way is the Department of Fisheries and Oceans refusing to provide guidance to allow Sustainable Marine to move forward. It had one platform in the water, which again was the only project to ever supply energy back into the grid.
The meeting also included one other company, because people, of course, will say that somebody else will do it. I asked the one other company if it actually had a project proposal. It didn't, but it had an idea. I asked if it had any investors. It didn't. It didn't have a project in the water. It had no money, and it wasn't putting power in the grid. The other company said that was correct.
However, for the one company that is putting power in the grid, what are we doing? We are telling it to go home. Not “we” on this side of the House. Let's be clear on that. The NDP-Liberal coalition and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans are saying, “take your ball and your bat, and go home”.
What did Sustainable Marine do? It took it upon itself to remove all its equipment from that site. It not only did that, but also spent an extra quarter of a million dollars to send divers to the site to ensure that not one piece of plastic, chain, or any other remnant of their project was left to contaminate, so to speak, the site it was using for its project.
The only good news is that when I spoke to—
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Absolutely, Chair. We're talking about division, and I think it's important that folks understand the carve-outs that have happened with respect to the carbon tax around this country. That has created significant division, and the division, of course, is related directly to energy security. Of course, now the tidal power project has been cancelled by the lack of direction provided by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. It was a significant glimmer of hope for Atlantic Canadians to allow them and us—I'll include myself there—to become energy-independent. This is a significant division-creating area for all of us in Atlantic Canada, based on the policies of this NDP-Liberal coalition government.
When I asked Sustainable Marine whether they would consider coming back, how this gentleman worded it was, “You know, if you threw me a lifeline, I would probably climb up the rope.” That says a lot for the gentleman and for Sustainable Marine to be looking at how to harness tidal power as an energy source, which would be a tremendous feat.
As I said, the largest tides in the world are in the Bay of Fundy. If we could possibly do that, which they were well on their way to doing, then that would change the landscape. We wouldn't need to be talking about the divisive policies of the NDP-Liberal government here in Ottawa, because Atlantic Canadians would not be requiring carve-outs, because they continue to need to use home heating fuel as a fuel source. As I said, this certainly causes significant difficulties for the two elderly ladies whom I discussed previously.
One other thing, of course, that has caused significant problems for Atlantic Canadians is that, historically, they would rely meagre pensions, the OAS—and we're talking about the Canada pension plan—but they also rely on equity built up in their homes after many years. In Nova Scotia and the other Atlantic provinces, people tend not to move around a whole lot. They would own their own homes for a considerable length of time. Now when we begin to talk to young people in Cumberland—Colchester, we understand very clearly that the cost of a home has doubled, the cost of a mortgage has gone up 150% and, of course, the cost of rent has doubled.
We're beginning to see that. People have not only energy insecurity now, because we know their ability, as I discussed over the last several minutes, to pay their energy bills has gone down, and their energy bills have gone up; and we also know their ability to buy a house is now being lost. The next generation coming along have significant despair.
It's interesting. My from South Shore—St. Margarets came up with a great new word that this government, the NDP-Liberal coalition, is selling to people, and it's called “hopium”. They are wanting people to have hope from their opioid-laced policies. I won't divert myself into the opioid crisis, but for many of their other policies they're selling this haze-inducing utopia that just does not exist for the average person out there.
Certainly those of us on this side of the discussion are clearly getting incredible numbers of people who are losing hope, because of the divisive nature of this NDP-Liberal coalition. I know very clearly that my colleagues on the other side are getting it as well. I talked to many of them after we came back in September on how their summer was. When they were out door-knocking, the disdain with which they were greeted at the door really led them down this road of division, of needing to carve-out a carbon tax relief for Atlantic Canadians.
We know that when they were out door-knocking and talking about their “hopium” policies, people were not buying that any more. People really understood very clearly the policy of continuing to spend $600 billion of inflationary spending, as my great colleague spoke about, and supply-and-demand economics. We know very clearly that those “hopium” types of policies are things that Canadians from coast to coast have been able to see through and understand. This kind of foolish spending is no longer something that they believe in.
What they believe in is common sense. They know very clearly that things like tidal power, like being able to afford a home, to feed yourself, and to keep a roof over your head are very important to Canadians. What they understand very clearly is that they want the chance to do that.
They want a chance to buy their own home so that they could get back to what would normally happen to Atlantic Canadians, before the highest inflation we've seen in 40 years. Their ability to buy a house would appreciate modestly in value over the many years that they would actually own the home. Then if they were owning that home—and of course, as their lives became shorter and shorter—they would know that not only would they have perhaps a small pension, if they were fortunate, but they would have equity in their home, which would then allow them to live through the latter years of their lives in relative comfort.
We know that, as the NDP and Liberals have gone around knocking on doors this summer, they know that the “hopium” they were selling to Canadians just doesn't exist. Canadians are not buying that, and they know very clearly that the crisis that now exists is creating a division across this country.
The other thing, of course, that is causing division and distrust in the NDP-Liberal coalition is related to Bill , which my colleague talked about, being in the Senate now. We know very clearly that Canadian farmers....
I think it's important and germane that we understand how that supply chain works. When you tax the farmer who grows the food and you tax the trucker who delivers the food, then the person, the consumer at the final end, of course, is going to be paying more and more. That's common sense that anybody could understand. As a friend of mine once said, “Businesses don't pay more tax. They pass those taxes on to consumers.” When you tax the farmer and you tax the person who delivers it, then the person who buys it at the end of that chain, of course, is going to pay more for that product.
There's no expectation—well, perhaps there is on the part of this NDP-Liberal coalition—that the farmer would absorb all of those costs. We know, when we talked to our agriculture critic, that the costs for farmers and the requirement to heat their barns and dry grain have gone up precipitously over the last eight years, making it almost untenable.
We know that, very clearly, Canada really should be a powerhouse in our ability to feed the world. Very sadly, the disrespect that the NDP-Liberal coalition has shown to farmers is not allowing Canadian farmers to do that. When we have an ability to do that—
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Thank you very much, so I'll get another opportunity.
This is on the amendment.
I appreciate the comments by my NDP colleague, Mr. Blaikie. I always find that I have to do a little bit of self-reflection every time he speaks. I think he makes some fairly good points about opportunities. We don't always have the opportunity to make consensus choices. Certainly there are examples in which motions are passed at the committee that not everybody agrees with, whether they abstain or what have you.
The challenge I have with this motion is that there is actually an opportunity to have every party at the committee send a message, to the Government of Alberta and Albertans, that reiterates the importance of the CPP, that Canadians benefit from the CPP and that Albertans can be encouraged to stay within the CPP. There is all-party support for that motion. There is not all-party support to make the motion politically advantageous and for the government to use a province to help them in their failing poll numbers.
We could get out of this room today if we actually just dialed down the motion a bit, and I could guarantee you that there would be a news article written about all parties supporting the CPP. I can tell you that there probably won't be a news article written about a highly politically motivated motion that's passed with non-consensus votes.
The bigger point is that there is an opportunity, as the has put forward language that supports the CPP. If the other parties aren't interested in considering that language, which was circulated well in advance.... In fact, immediately upon the motion's being moved to debate, the Conservatives worked on and provided sample language that would take the political language out of the third point, including standing with Canadians who wish to protect the CPP and encouraging Albertans to remain in the CPP so that it can be secured for Albertans and all Canadians—with, of course, apologies to the good people of Quebec, who have their own pension plan.
We can pass that today, but the government has decided that it wants to make an example out of Premier Danielle Smith because they're failing in the polls. They'd rather fight her than fight the .
The odd irony in all of this is that this is actually derailing the government's own legislative agenda. There are two bills that have to come before this committee to be passed before we break for the holidays, and it's actually the government that's chosen to move this motion instead. The government's choosing to move a politically motivated motion at committee instead of allowing its legislative agenda to go forward, which seems pretty bizarre to me. They're choosing to pick a fight with Danielle Smith rather than getting certain bills passed through this committee.
What's going to end up happening is that we're going to rush. We'll have very few meetings on the fall economic statement when it gets here. We'll have few meetings on Bill when it gets here. We won't do our diligence as a committee because the government's interested in picking a fight with Danielle Smith.
I'm not a great historian of parliamentary precedent and motions that have been reported to the House, but it seems a little odd that a committee wants to single out a particular province. Personally, if it said British Columbia, with an NDP premier, or now an NDP premier in Winnipeg, I still don't think that would be appropriate.
There are questions in question period every day about Danielle Smith's CPP plan. Some members can be encouraged to run for provincial Parliament, but the motion as it's written allows the chair to report to the House. That means concurrence can be moved on that motion, which will spark a debate, and members of Parliament can get up and make any comments they like about Premier Danielle Smith and Alberta's CPP.
We have the opportunity—
:
Mr. Chair, the language was circulated to all of the relevant individuals immediately upon the government member moving the motion. We can end up playing politics with this all night. It's actually the government's legislative agenda that's being put at risk.
By the way, the has requested that we begin the review of the proceeds of crime and money laundering act, which is statutorily obligated to occur before the end of this calendar year. That's one meeting. We only have six meetings left. We're supposed to do Bill and the fall economic statement.
I'm a bit puzzled why the government has decided to move this motion now and not accept any friendly amendments that have been recommended until now.
By the way, we're also supposed to hear from the . Now, I think the minister has given us a date—December 7. I assume it will be a combination of Bill , the fall economic statement, plus inflation and housing. The minister only likes to show up to committee when there's legislation to pass. There's either that theory, which is reasonable, or the other theory, which is that the Prime Minister's Office doesn't allow her to come, because she's actually too good at committee and she overshines the .
We went through this last spring. To remind people, it's actually the Prime Minister's Office that doesn't want the here, because she's actually doing a better job than the on some things. We'll only get her for an hour, and she might say that she's going to be very generous and give us an extra 20 minutes. The reason why this committee's dysfunctional is because the Minister of Finance actually hasn't agreed to any invitation to this committee outside appearances that she decides to make to pass legislation.
If we want reasons for which Conservatives are making a point about this motion, then I'll sum them up in a few points. The first is that we have an opportunity as a committee to actually have a consensus and tell Albertans that we, as an entire committee, feel that the Canada pension plan is important. The second is that we are going to harm ourselves in our ability to pass legislation through the committee. I can't believe I'm making recommendations to the government about how they can pass legislation quicker through the committee. This is what's going to end up happening.
The government's decided to move a politically motivated motion to distract from its failing results in the polls. They think that Premier Danielle Smith is better fodder for the than the . It's unfortunate that we can't get a consensus on the committee to send a message to the Alberta government and Albertans about the importance of the CPP.
I will take Mr. Blaikie's recommendations and intervention to heart and reflect upon whether as a matter of principle I'll continue to hold up the passage of a politically motivated motion, or whether there may be an opportunity just to abstain. At this juncture, it defies logic why we're here arguing about a politically motivated motion, when there's so much work the committee needs to do. We could pass it pretty quickly otherwise. If the government members are signalling that they're open to a friendly amendment, I think we could probably wrap it up pretty quickly. That's not the message that we've been given.
We only have six meetings left. We're going to take one, I believe, for a ministerial appearance.
We're supposed to take one for a statutory review of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act. By the way, if we don't do that, the government is going to get a bad mark from the Financial Action Task Force, which is reviewing Canada's approach to money laundering. I don't really think we want a black X; I don't think that the government wants a black X.
It seems to me that the government doesn't have a ton of leverage to decide to put this politically motivated motion through the committee. I guess they should have thought about that before they decided to bring the motion.
In addition, the motion doesn't recognize that, by design, the CPP has with it withdrawal criteria for provinces if they decide they want to set up their own plan. I don't think that's a great idea, but we could hear from the Bloc Québécois about the QPP. It has actually functioned fairly well, I think, for Quebeckers.
It's within each provincial government's right to ask whether it's getting value for money for its own taxpayers and its residents in the CPP. There is a mechanism by which a province can exercise that ability and have a discussion.
I don't actually believe that the methodology is on such sound footing as to provide the result in terms of the assets that would be given to Alberta should it withdraw. But the truth is, that's for Albertans to think about and discuss internally. We could send them a message, as a committee, that is unanimous, or we can let a politically motivated motion pass the committee and not get much traction or attention because it's politically motivated.
Call me an idealist. I just happen to think there's an opportunity to do something here where we're all on the same page. I recognize that it may not be where everybody is at the moment, but I still hold out hope.
I suppose if Mr. Blaikie's intervention is the signal that we can't get there, then I'll certainly have to reflect on the path forward. But I do think it would be something if the committee actually said that we all support the CPP.
Whatever member wants to move concurrence in the House and talk until their heart's content about the political decisions of a particular premier in order to score local political points at home, that's up to that member. I just don't think the committee is a perfect place to single out a provincial premier.
I stand to be corrected by the historians on what previous committees have done in this respect, but I'll remind members that just as the winds of change may sweep through Wellington Street and Langevin Block—yes, that's right, I still call it "Langevin Block"—the winds of change can sweep through provincial legislative buildings, as it has in Manitoba. We now have an NDP government in Manitoba. We have an NDP government in British Columbia.
I don't really want to create a precedent for the future where committees will single out various premiers, when a particular party is failing in the polls, in order to score political points to distract from a narrative.
We have an opportunity to send a message as a committee. If we're now being told that no one wants to take that opportunity, we're prepared to talk it out.
The government is just wasting its own time at this point. I hope it's clear—we're going to burn through this meeting, and we're going to burn through Thursday's meeting. We won't be getting any legislation passed here. It will require a direction from the House. We will shortchange stakeholders who have serious concerns about the fall economic statement. As we understand, there will be some tax measures put in that legislation that deserve to be scrutinized. There are lots of stakeholder concerns about Bill , which we're not going to spend a lot of time on anyway.
Frankly, maybe we could make a deal and maybe the motion could be passed. If no one wants to take the nice approach and pass a unanimous motion, but their government is intent on having the political fight, maybe we could make a deal where the would actually show up at the committee. I could be persuaded to abstain on a vote on the CPP if the Minister of Finance is going to actually appear on any one of the number of studies we have open, other than just showing up, as is the tradition, to pass legislation through committee.
Mr. Chair, I hope I've given my colleagues something to think about. If they are open to hearing, formally, that amendment, to reduce the political tension and get a nice moment where we all lock arms and send a message to the great people of Alberta about the Canada pension plan, I'd be open to moving that at the appropriate time.
However, Mr. Chair, as I say, call me an idealist, but I think we're going to miss a sincere opportunity to do some nation building and unifying for once, and instead continue down the path of sowing the seeds of division.
With that, Mr. Chair, I'll cede the floor.
I'm delighted to be participating in this debate at the finance committee. It's very kind of you to have me. I recognize a face from the environment and sustainable development committee. Greetings to him, and I want to publicly invite him to go for a spin, should he feel so inclined. Thank you.
[English]
Mr. Chair, I want to address some concerns about this issue, because we're talking about respect for the Constitution, and also respect for the will of each and every province. I think it's quite important, when we live in a confederation—this is what Canada is all about—that we respect the fact that, yes, some provinces can have their own agenda.
[Translation]
We do indeed have the Canada pension plan, but we also have the Quebec pension plan, which has a long history. It was established in the mid-1960s, following frank, honest, effective and successful negotiations, setting Quebec apart from the rest of Canada. It doesn't mean that people are happier or less happy, but it does mean that people have taken full responsibility for their choices and decisions, and we know how that's turned out. Soon, the plan will have been around for 60 years, and things seem to be going well. The original motion refers to the committee recognizing, “the important contribution of the Quebec Pension Plan which was established independently at the same time as the Canada Pension Plan”. If things weren't going well, we would know, but they are, so that's good.
From our standpoint, it's important to respect the will of the provinces in certain areas of jurisdiction. That means having frank, constructive and fruitful discussions to create a win-win situation for Canadians. All of us here want to make everyday life better for Canadians. No one is here to create problems. We have opposing views on how to go about it, which, of course, is the whole basis of politics. We have differing views, but when ideas clash, good things come. That's how it should be, and we need to respect that.
These last eight years, we have seen this government's insatiable appetite to encroach on provincial jurisdiction. We saw examples of that recently in Supreme Court and other rulings on the federal government's ambitions in environmental matters. It's not for nothing that I brought this up earlier. I am on the environment and sustainable development committee. I am the official opposition's critic for the environment and climate change, so I am particularly attuned to the issue. This case sets the example. We can do things the right way, and we can respect one another's decisions and areas of jurisdiction. However, that wasn't the case when it came to the environment, in many respects.
I can hear my fellow members rushing to point out that the Supreme Court gave the federal government the right to legislate in relation to carbon pricing. The challenge to the Liberals' carbon tax went all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled that the government had the authority to implement the tax. Just because the Supreme Court says you can do something doesn't mean you should. What happened next? The government's approach clearly did not have the intended result.
Need I remind my fellow members that, after eight years of this Liberal government lecturing the entire planet, Canada was ranked 58th out of 63 countries for its efforts to tackle climate change? That is a far cry from the Liberal rhetoric, which is all about preaching endlessly. That score did not come from the official opposition, the Conservatives, or some institute. It came from the UN, which nearly a year ago, ranked Canada 58th out of 63 countries, following eight years of Liberal rule. Clearly, the Liberals' policy is not having the intended results.
The reason I bring it up is Bill , which a number of provinces took issue with, including Quebec. It contains provisions that are almost insulting to the collective memory of Quebeckers, with the federal government giving itself somewhat of a veto power over Quebec's hydroelectric projects.
Whenever I talk about it, I feel as though I'm divulging a secret that has unfortunately been kept for far too long. People are shocked when they find out. They wonder, “What's this all about?” Rivers are the site of hydroelectric projects, and rivers are under provincial—not federal—jurisdiction. What, then, is this power the federal government has given itself?
Section 7 of the Act created under Bill contains very specific provisions that allow the environment minister to subject major hydroelectricity projects to environmental assessments, should he be so inclined. Those projects are none of his business, though.
Quebec is quite fortunate to have everything it needs, geographically speaking, to unlock enormous green energy potential through hydroelectricity. We are obviously very happy about that. Shortly, I will go over some of the landmark moments culminating in Quebec's energy self-sufficiency and talk about how people in the forties and fifties had the vision needed to turn Quebec into a hydroelectricity powerhouse. That can be said of the seventies as well. We saw that same vision come to fruition recently, when the current premier inaugurated the Romaine hydroelectric complex, alongside the Honourable Jean Charest, Quebec's premier from 2003 to 2012 and the person who green-lit the project.
Through Bill , the federal government gave itself the power to subject hydroelectric projects to federal environmental assessments.
Let me say this. Like an adult, Quebec carries out its own environmental assessments, and the system works. Of course, people will remember how certain assessments were carried out hurriedly. Everyone in Quebec obviously remembers when the Parti Québécois government unfortunately bypassed the environmental review process for the most polluting project in Quebec's history, the McInnis cement plant in Gaspé. The then environment minister gave the go‑ahead to the most polluting project in history.
That was a sad day, indeed. Need I point out who the environment minister at the time was? No other than the current member for Chambly, the leader of the Bloc Québécois. Dear friends, now when you hear the leader of the Bloc Québécois preaching about the environment to everyone who doesn't think like he does, remind him that he was the most polluting environment minister in Quebec's history.
All that to say, Quebec is capable of carrying out its own environmental assessments of hydroelectric projects. Why, then, did the federal government empower itself to redo what Quebec has already done? Going through the process a second time is absolutely pointless. It goes much further than that. As far as we're concerned, the environmental experts who analyze—
I want to thank the member for Outremont for her comments. She is well aware that I have the utmost respect and esteem for her. It always surprises me that certain members of her party are ministers and yet she is not. Obviously, that reflects on the 's judgment, but that's another story.
The member for Outremont's motion says, word for word, that the committee “recognizes the important contribution of the Quebec Pension Plan which was established independently at the same time as the Canada Pension Plan”. It illustrates that a province is able to do one thing and the federal government, another. That is not what the federal government is in the habit of doing, however. Let's take a closer look. Some will argue that things are fine and Ottawa minds its own business, but I don't think so.
Luckily, in the forties and fifties, Quebec wanted to fully develop its hydroelectric potential, and that led to the province becoming a green energy powerhouse.
I will never apologize for being the environment and climate change critic or sharing with my fellow committee members the historical events that turned Quebec into what is now an energy powerhouse. Hydroelectricity is a powerful green energy not just for Quebec, but also for Canada as a whole. It came about because people made important decisions.
In 1944, the Liberal government announced the creation of Hydro-Québec and nationalized the Montreal Light, Heat and Power Company. The Beauharnois power plant already existed, but through expansion, its energy production tripled in the forties and fifties.
Great projects followed, projects that seem to have gotten lost in the collective history of Quebeckers, unfortunately. They were nevertheless present, as the full potential of the Bersimis river was realized. The project was extraordinary, literally blazing new trails. To give you a sense of the area, you go up the north shore till you get to about Forestville. You go about 100 kilometres inland, and there, in the middle of the forest, you'll see the Bersimis river. Two superpowerful hydroelectric dams were built in 1953 and 1956, and 70 years later, they are still in operation. A vision for the future was laid out in the 1970s, and this potential was fully realized under the leadership of Hydro-Québec, a Crown corporation.
At the same time, the North Shore was also home to a thorough assessment of the extraordinary potential of the Outardes and Manicouagan rivers, which run alongside one another. At the time, the assessment revealed that the rivers could accommodate seven hydroelectric dams. After recalculation, it was determined that six dams would ultimately be built. If anyone ever tells you that they've been to the Manic‑4 dam, they are lying, because no such dam was ever built. Manic‑1, Manic‑2, Manic‑3, Manic‑5, Outardes‑1 and Outardes‑2 were built. That hydroelectric potential was realized in the fifties. Studies were carried out, and construction of the iconic Manic‑5 dam was green-lit in 1958. It remains one of the greatest achievements in the minds of Quebeckers. It is a source of great pride for the nation, in particular, and rightfully so.
The same can be said of other initiatives to assess hydroelectric potential and build plants, including the one on Highway 50, the Carillon generating station, inaugurated in 1962 by René Lévesque, then minister of hydraulic resources. There's actually a great picture of René Lévesque with his son that was taken by photographer Antoine Desilets, the father of , the member for Rivière-des-Mille-Îles, if memory serves me correctly. I have to give him a shout-out.
Quebec was able to develop its hydroelectric potential in the forties and fifties, and again, in the seventies with the great James Bay hydroelectric project. Let's not forget it was the subject of quite the debate at the time, with some arguing that the development wasn't necessarily a good idea and that it was better to pursue nuclear energy. That argument, which is perfectly legitimate, was put forward at the time.
Some rather peculiar statements by today's standards were made then. One commentator said it wasn't necessarily smart to erect a dam on every single Catholic French-Canadian river. The person who made that statement—which I repeated off the top of my head, but you get the gist—was no other than Jacques Parizeau, who, as we know, was very helpful to Quebec in other ways.
The reason I bring this up today is to remind members that when provincial jurisdiction is respected, great and wonderful things happen.
Hydroelectricity is a good example of that, but unfortunately, this federal Liberal government wants to encroach on areas that are not under its jurisdiction. We saw that in the case of hydroelectricity in Quebec. As the environment critic, I am extremely proud to talk about this enormous green energy potential. We also see that in today's motion, which recognizes the important contribution of the Quebec pension plan as well as the Canada pension plan.
At the time, there were discussions, debates and a bit of a tug‑of‑war, if you will. That is perfectly legitimate and entirely normal in a democracy. It worked out, as we see, because the will of the provinces was respected. The federal government needs to do its job, which is bringing people together and acting within its jurisdiction. If the provinces happen to have their own projects, the federal government needs to respect that. That's what happened in the case of the pension plans and hydroelectricity. With this government, though, we see a constant appetite to erode the current sector. That causes tension with the provinces but doesn't move anything forward.
I will leave it there. I wanted to share a different take on this debate. The principle is the same: the country is much better off when provincial jurisdiction is respected.
Thank you.
:
We've had lots of substance here, but I wanted to add a little more substance. I have some materials that I think are critical to add to the debate.
I'll start out with a respected reporter, John Ibbitson. I won't read his entire article, though it probably merits doing so. For the sake of brevity, I'll just read parts of it.
He starts by saying that could point to some “accomplishments”, and then says, “every prime minister's highest priority should be to leave the federation stronger, or at least not weaker, than [he] found it.” It says, “By that measure”—and these are Mr. Ibbitson's words, not mine—“Mr. Trudeau's tenure has been a failure.” He continues, "Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, whose United Conservative Party was elected on a platform of challenging Ottawa, is threatening to pull the province out of the Canada Pension Plan. While we can debate whether the LifeWorks assessment of how much of the CPP's assets Alberta would be entitled to—or that of [the] University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe, or some other formula—the fact remains that the pension plan in particular, and Canadian unity in general, would be [weaker] were the province to leave."
The article goes on to say, “It's not surprising, then, that would come to the defence of the CPP. What is surprising is [his] depth of...hostility.”
The article states that wrote to Ms. Smith and said, “'I have instructed my cabinet and officials to take all necessary steps to ensure Albertans—and Canadians—are fully aware of the risks of your plan, and to do everything possible to ensure the CPP remains intact'”.
That's interesting. The article goes on to quote as saying, “'We will not stand by as anyone seeks to weaken pensions and reduce the retirement income of Canadians.' Ms. Smith, in turn, dismissed the Prime Minister's warning as 'overwrought.'”
It states, “Employment Minister and Edmonton MP further manifested Ottawa's get-tough approach [on] Sunday, when he warned on CTV's Question Period that if Albertans leave...CPP, 'it's a one-way ticket.'”
Mr. Ibbitson's article goes on to say, “There is no need...to panic. We are a long way from Alberta pulling out of the CPP. The province's former treasurer, Jim Dinning, is [a] leading public [consultant], which may or may not lead Ms. Smith to call a referendum on the issue. Federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has urged Albertans not to leave the plan, while sympathizing with their frustration.”
It goes on to say, “But it's worth pausing to reflect on the damage Mr. Trudeau has inflicted on Canadian unity after eight years in power.”
I hesitate because I don't want to overstate this, but it's been a pattern of the that when this nation is at its most vulnerable, instead of being a great unifier, he becomes the great divider, whether that's with respect to personal health independence or, in this case, with respect to the CPP. The Prime Minister has the choice to be either a statesman or a politician, and clearly he's chosen the latter. He has once again put his own personal interests above those of our country.
This is the most damning of criticism of any leader because for any leader to even be in the ballpark of successful, they must put their country first, as many prime ministers in the past have, even ahead of their own political ambitions and even over the ambitions of their parties. This is clearly not the case.
That's what's really troubling about what this motion is all about. My colleague Mr. Chambers said that we could walk out today with a unifying motion that the NDP, the Liberal Party and the Conservatives could all agree to, which would encourage Albertans to stay as part of the CPP.
Instead, the Liberal Party has chosen to amplify this message of division. This should cause self-reflection, I would think, by everyone at this committee, not the least of whom is the NDP member who, instead of being a force for collaboration and unity, is instead encouraging amplifying division.
I will continue to read:
Progressive centralizers in Laurentian Canada tell each other that Ottawa must act on this or that “in the national interest.” But the national interest is emphatically not served if their actions anger large swaths of the country.
When the Liberals won their majority government in October, 2015, they had a golden opportunity to reverse decades of Liberal unpopularity in the West. The Grits had taken 17 seats in British Columbia, seven in Manitoba, four in Alberta and one in Saskatchewan. They were well placed to grow that vote with policies that consulted rather than dictated, that recognized the importance of the resource-based Western economy and that respected the distinct societies of the Prairies and B.C.
Mr. Trudeau inherited a federation at peace. In Quebec, the Parti Québécois was out of government and in decline, and the federal Bloc Québécois was decimated, having taken only 10 seats in the 2015 election. Things were quieter on the federal-provincial front than at any time since the 1950s. Surely this was a time to strengthen national bonds – between English and French, between the Heartland and the West.
Eight years later, the Bloc is resurgent, with 32 of Quebec’s 78 seats. Coalition Avenir Québec Premier François Legault is stoking French-English tensions, most recently by almost doubling out-of-province tuition for students attending English universities.
And Alberta is perhaps even more estranged. If the government did hold a referendum on withdrawing from the CPP, it would in reality be a referendum on increased sovereignty for the province.
Meanwhile, and not coincidentally, polls suggest the Conservatives would trounce the Liberals if an election were held today.
I'm honestly not concerned with the politics of the day. Polls will come and go. Liberal governments will come and go, Conservative governments will come and go, and maybe one day an NDP government will come and go. However, we have, as members of Parliament, a sacrosanct responsibility to our country, which I firmly believe is the greatest country in all the world, to do everything in our power to put it first.
Our country is starting to fray, not at the edges, but at the main seams that hold us together. The could have handled this very differently, but that cat is out of the bag, so there's nothing we can do there. However, this finance committee can still do the right thing. Instead of going for political points, maybe for a story here or there, I don't know, it might even help the Liberal Party. I don't know. I don't think it would, but maybe their calculus in the PMO is that it somehow helps them.
We've got to have our eye on the long game on national unity. There simply are not many objectives that are more important than national unity. The scars this government has been creating with respect to division will long outlast this government.
Honestly, in all candour, I have respect for my colleagues across the way. I got to know them a little bit on the trip and I know them to be intelligent, respectful, good people. I would just tell them to talk to the PMO and say, this is an opportunity, I think, even to win politically, to look like the bigger party in a unifying way, but know that this is creating damage. To get a story here or there, continuing to inflict pain and to create division among our country, just isn't worth it, guys.
I'll continue on here. Mr. Ibbitson continues:
What went wrong? In a word: bossiness. The Liberals imposed conditions on the provinces before granting health funding. They imposed a carbon tax on provinces that didn't meet carbon-reduction targets. Bill C-69 imposed such intrusive conditions on resource development that the Supreme Court ruled the law unconstitutional.
The Liberals decided that national priorities justified using...spending power to dictate terms to the provinces. They were willing to let the Prairie oil-and-gas sector suffer in order to meet [their] carbon reduction targets. The result: increasing resentment toward Ottawa across the country. This is Canada today, on Justin Trudeau's watch.
Once again, I know that we all have pressures, and the pressure to win on the latest face-off or the latest scrimmage is powerful, as is getting that great social media clip where you're taking a shot at the Conservatives, and you feel good in the moment. To somehow spike the ball on Danielle Smith is perhaps because, as my colleague said, they see that as a richer target, or a better foil than our official Leader of the Opposition.
These jobs that we have are serious. They come with incredible consequences. We have a choice every day in every action we take. Either we can be a voice of reasonability, a unifying voice, a voice for a better Canada or we can go for the cheap political points.
I appreciate that, Mr. Chair, to set the stage, as it were.
I'd like to welcome my colleague Mr. Kurek, who is joining us today. I believe Mr. Genuis will be joining us as well in a little bit.
As I left off, a politician often has the choice—and a leader, a prime minister, even more so—between being a statesman and being a politician. A statesman will always do what's in the best interests of the nation. A politician will sometimes take the opportunity to score political points. I think we've seen what course has taken. As a member of Parliament, but more importantly as a Canadian, I do find that very disappointing.
It is, of course, a legacy. As Mr. Ibbitson said in his article, in 2015 the Liberals actually came in with some representation from the west, but that's been quickly being eliminated. In politics, things can change in the blink of an eye, but as of now it appears as though if the election were held today, there would be very, very limited representation from the Liberal Party and it's not healthy.
We really want to have at least two national parties that can speak for the entire country. I suppose the has calculated that there's some type of electoral victory he can gain by disenfranchising Alberta, by picking a fight with the premier and by treating Albertans unequally when it comes to the carbon tax exemption. I can't for the life of me honestly understand even the politics of how they're going to gain any popularity from picking a fight with the premier.
Even in this committee, unfortunately, members have chosen to pick a fight. Conservatives are very agreeable, actually, to having an amended motion that would say something to the effect that we would encourage Albertans to stay in the CPP, but instead, they've chosen politically charged language naming their premier specifically and sort of creating a political firestorm. Maybe they want to have stories written about it. I can't guess why, but all it will do to Albertans, I'm sure, is infuriate them that once again the Liberal government is choosing not to acknowledge them.
It's been going on for about, what, 50 years, Damien, that Alberta's...? It goes back to the first Trudeau and the national energy plan. I know I said that and I know it's a swear word to my two Albertans here, but—
Mr. Damien Kurek: There are three.
Mr. Philip Lawrence: There are three. I'm sorry. Why don't you jump in here? It's good to see you, my friend.
It truly is challenging.
I actually want to go back to provide some foundation. My team found a great article written around the time of the inception of the Canada pension plan. I'll read some of it and make some comments as I go:
A major landmark in the development of Canada's social security system was reached in April 1965, when the new Canada Pension Plan was enacted. The law establishes, for the first time, a contributory system of earnings-related old-age, disability, and survivor insurance benefits in Canada. It was assented to on April 3, 1965, and...proclaimed on May 5. The collection of contributions under the new program will commence in January 1966, and retirement benefits will first become payable in January 1967.
The effect of this new legislation is, in general, to superimpose a system of contributory wage-related retirement pensions on top of [an] existing system of universal flat-rate old-age pensions, which is retained and, in fact, expanded. The new retirement pensions will be equal to about 25 percent of earnings at the end of an initial transitional period of 10 years.
In addition, contributory disability and survivor pensions are introduced; such pensions have previously been provided in Canada only to needy persons on an assistance basis.
All the new insurance benefits will be financed from contributions paid by insured persons and employers. The new Canadian social insurance program is similar in significant respects to the Federal old-age, survivors, and disability insurance (OASDI) program of the United States. There are, however, a number of important and interesting differences between the two systems. Some of the similarities and differences are pointed out in the course of the discussion below.
Canada has had Federal legislation dealing with old-age assistance since 1927. Similar legislation providing assistance for blind persons was adopted in 1937 and revised in 1951, and assistance to permanently and totally disabled persons was first provided in 1955. These assistance programs are similar in many ways to those in the United States. They are, in effect, cooperative Federal-Provincial programs, under which the Canadian Government makes grants to the Provinces covering a part of the cost of the Provincial programs. These programs were established and are administered by each Province separately.
At present the Federal Government pays 50 percent of the payments up to $75 a month to persons with limited means aged 65-69. It also shares in the cost of payments of up to the same amount under the programs for permanently and totally disabled persons and blind persons who pass a means test. In addition, the individual Provinces often make supplementary payments under their general assistance programs, the costs of which are shared by the Federal Government under the Unemployment Assistance Act of 1956. All of these assistance expenditures are financed from general revenues of the Federal and Provincial governments.
The Provinces, for a number of decades, have also been providing assistance pensions to needy widowed mothers. The Federal Government does not participate in the cost of these pensions, but proposals to do so have been made under the Canada Assistance Plan now being developed. The new assistance plan, which would consolidate and improve existing programs, has already been the subject of formal Federal-Provincial discussions.
That's interesting. Even in 1965, they saw the merit of having discussions with the provinces, not dictating to the provinces. There was a collaborative or co-operative approach. The article continues:
The Old Age Security Act, passed in 1951, established a national system of universal flat-rate old-age pensions, administered entirely by the Federal Government. Before the 1965 legislation, this program provided for payment of a flat pension to every person who reached age 70 and who satisfied certain minimum requirements regarding length of residence in Canada. The amount of the old-age pension was originally fixed at $40 a month.
I did have discussions with interpreters that sometimes they found it hard when members were reading text. I'm aware I'm reading text. Am I doing all right, interpreters? Am I good, yes? Do I need to slow down? Are we good? Maybe thumbs up, yes? I want to make sure we're okay. If I need to slow down, let me know. Again, the article continues:
The program of universal old-age pensions is financed out of a special old-age security fund set up in the general consolidated revenue fund of the Federal Government. The old-age fund receives its income from the earmarked yields of three taxes—a 4-percent tax on taxable income up to $3,000 a year for all individuals; a 3-percent tax on all corporate income subject to the corporate income tax; and a 3-percent tax on manufacturers' sales.
I assume my NDP colleague would like that. Manufacturing sales have been replaced by the GST. It's amazing it's still around, because the Liberals said that they were going to get rid of it. It continues:
The universal flat-pension program provided for by the Old Age Security Act will continue in force concurrently with the social insurance program enacted in 1965. The basic nature of the flat pension remains essentially unchanged, but certain modifications have been made in the age at which it is payable, in its adjustment to price changes, and in its residence requirements.
The subtitle is:
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY OF CANADA PENSION PLAN
The Canadian Government had been studying the possibility of introducing a contributory pension insurance program for a number of years. In 1950 a Joint Committee of the Senate and the House of Commons on old-age security was formed to review the existing old-age pension program, which operated with a means test and was subject to widespread criticism. After hearing testimony on a contributory and earnings-related insurance program, the Committee unanimously recommended a universal flat-rate pension beginning at age 70, as well as a Federal-Provincial old-age assistance program for persons aged 65-69 with limited means. The Old Age Security Act and the Old Age Assistance Act of 1951, both of which became effective in January 1952, followed closely the Committee’s recommendations.
The Federal Government in 1958 engaged Dr. R. M. Clark “to conduct an inquiry into facts relating to old-age security systems in effect in Canada and the United States.” His report—Economic Security for the Aged in the United States and Canada—contained no recommendations. It was presented to the Government early in 1959.
In July 1963 the Government submitted a resolution in the House of Commons and issued a supporting statement indicating its intention of enacting a contributory pension plan. The plan originally provided only for retirement pensions and pensions for aged survivors, in recognition of doubts that had been expressed about the constitutional competence of the Federal Government, under the British North America Act, to provide disability benefits and benefits for survivors under age 65. The plan thus limited was incorporated in a bill (C-75) that was given first reading in March 1964.
The Province of Ontario meanwhile had adopted a law in April 1963 requiring every private employer in the Province who employed 15 or more workers to maintain for them a pension with certain vesting provisions. (Under amendments adopted in 1964, maintenance of such a plan is no longer mandatory.) The Province was also studying the possibility of establishing a public pension for Ontario.
The Province of Quebec began developing a pension plan in August 1963, and in April 1964 it announced the details of its own pension insurance program.
So you see, provinces starting their own pension plan is neither new or novel. In fact, this is a dialogue that's been going on for over 60 years. The article continues:
Other Provinces also evidenced considerable interest in pensions—a subject of concern to them not only for itself but because of its implications for savings and capital accumulation.
The various developments at both the Federal and Provincial levels made necessary extensive consultation, therefore, between the Federal Government and the Provincial governments on the subject of pension planning. Four formal Federal-Provincial conferences were held during 1963 and 1964 at which the subject was discussed, including the proposals made by the Federal Government.
In June 1964, agreement was reached with the Provinces for amendment of section 94-A of the British North America Act to empower both the Canadian Parliament and the Provincial legislatures to enact legislation concerning survivor and disability [benefits] as well as.... The Canadian Constitution now authorizes the Federal Parliament to legislate concerning all three types of pensions, but it also provides that Federal legislation shall not affect the operation of any present or future Provincial legislation dealing with pensions.
On the...Federal-Provincial negotiations...the Department of National Health and Welfare of the Federal Government in August 1964...a White Paper—The Canada Pension Plan. This document outlined and explained the pension insurance program that the Government was advancing.
The substance of the White Paper proposals was incorporated in a bill (C-136), which was introduced in the House of Commons for first reading on November 9, 1964. After second reading on November 18, the bill was referred to a Joint Committee of the Senate and the House of Commons. The Committee recommended certain substantive changes, as well as a number of technical changes. The Government approved and took action on most of these recommendations. The revised Canada Pension Plan...was subsequently passed in the House of Commons on March 29...on April 2. It received Royal Assent on April 3, 1965.
I'm starting with the history here. You can see that, in the formation of the CPP, it was not simply a federal government dictating to the provinces. In fact, it was occurring organically across the nation in various provinces, including Ontario and Quebec. Once again, it wasn't just the federal government dictating to the provinces, “This is how we're going to go.” A spirit of collaboration and co-operation built the CPP into being the trusted source of retirement income Canadians can rely on. The divisive rhetoric on this is quite a departure from the history of the CPP.
I stand ready to continue, but I understand that my colleagues also want to talk. I often tell my son when he's playing minor hockey that it's important to pass the puck to make sure that other people have their opportunity to shine as well.
With that, I cede my time, but I would like to be put back on the list, Mr. Chair.
Chair, it's a real honour to be able to join you and all of the members of this committee here. It's nice to meet many of them for the first time. As the rookie in Parliament, it's a real special place, to be in the company of so many tenured people.
Today is a really important debate in the finance committee. It's affecting my own province of Alberta, which is a part of the country that was a big part of the solution in recovering from the 2008-09 global financial crisis. It's a part of the country that fuels, feeds and supports our national economy as the backbone of our success as a country. That can only happen if it has a partner in a federal government that understands how national unity works and is an ally to our energy sector, to the energy workers and to the people who do great work every single day across a range of issues.
As I think about what we're here to debate, after eight years of , provinces have actually never been as divided. This government inherited a legacy of national unity and of a country confident about its future. It has found a way to pit one group against another and traffic in identities, with one region against another. Provinces are planning to just not collect the carbon tax because of their prime minister's unfair application of a temporary pause. His Liberals voted just against a common sense, fair motion to extend this temporary pause to all Canadians.
I have constituents who I now represent who called and told me that they might be losing their house at the end of this year. Their costs are going through the roof; their mortgage is out of control. They have three children they're trying to feed and put through school. They asked why only one part of the country gets relief from this painful carbon tax. Why, in our own backyard in Calgary, do we not feel like we are eligible for that kind of relief?
Provinces have also taken the federal government all the way to the Supreme Court to fight their unfair energy policies. They are at the natural resources committee now trying to ram through another bill that is bad for Alberta, which is Bill , the unjust transition bill.
With this bill, I think there's some expertise we could reflect on that is non-partisan and comes from a place of love for country and the unity we represent. I'd love to take a minute here, with your permission, Chair, to explain some of the thinking that came to us as early as last year.
One of the greatest scholars in this country is a woman named Heather Exner-Pirot. She's at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. She's a senior fellow there who leads on Arctic, energy and critical minerals. She's one of the most important thinkers of our time. I can say she's a dear friend and former colleague of mine.
Back in May, 2022, she published a really important article entitled “Ottawa's 'just transition' needs to be challenged for encouraging fantasy around oil and gas”. I think that says something. It's about a government that divides Canadians on the basis of region and traffics in fantasies that undermine a wellspring of support for this country.
Our energy industry has the capacity to lower international emissions if we could only get other countries off dirty coal. Our energy has the ability to partner with first nations in true economic reconciliation in this country. Our energy sector would have the capacity to fund whatever entitlements the and his NDP-Liberal partner,, would invent next. It would rebuild our armed forces. It would defeat Russia, Iran and China in their ambitions to have hegemony around the world.
I think her article is quite apt and worth paying attention to. Let me share it with colleagues around the table at this point. She writes:
A fantasy has emerged in Canada called a “just transition.” In this paradigm, the transition from dirty fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy in the form of solar panels and windmills will create a prosperous, low-carbon future with a thriving green economy. Taking action now will make our economy stronger and more competitive.
The catch is that workers and communities who depend on the oil and gas sector will be disadvantaged. The “just transition” ensures no one is left behind, with workers given the supports to succeed in other, more sustainable, fields. So committed is the federal government to this version of reality, that it is planning to introduce legislation in its name, to codify its “people-centred just transition principles.”
We've heard “peoplekind” before. Maybe that's not her intention or what the intention was in the preamble for this legislation.
She continues:
The first and most obvious challenge to this premise is that there isn’t much of a transition yet. Global demand for oil and gas is as high as it has ever been. Whether you think this is good or bad, it is a fact. Years of underinvestment in production, now topped with sanctions on Russia, mean that prices for LNG and refined products are at record levels. Energy experts think crude oil will soon hit $180 a barrel or higher. Even if demand does eventually match up with supply, it still makes sense for the western world to maintain some production of its own, instead of relying on OPEC and Russia. Canada, by far the world’s biggest oil exporter that is a democracy, should be the last man standing.
Furthermore:
It seems almost farcical to dedicate legislative effort and taxpayer dollars to training programs for unemployable oilpatch workers, or to help oil and gas regions become economically viable. Canada has never exported more crude and bitumen than it does now, buoyed by the recent completion of the Line 3 pipeline, the reversal of the Capline pipeline, and global markets taking whatever we could muster. But labour, especially experienced labour, is a constraining factor, and is hampering growth, even with wages at three times or more the Canadian average.
These are high-quality jobs that Heather is describing, with people wearing boots, vests and hard hats and getting things done for this country. She adds:
The joke is they need to start retraining coders to become drillers.
This is an argument she's making pitched to modern reality:
Critics might concede that, yes, although there is a temporary reprieve in demand, in order to save the planet we need a transition, the sooner the better. The idea seems to be that we can, or should, stop using petroleum products, and any oilsands project or pipeline we build now is destined to become a stranded asset. This is the fantasy that “just transition” encourages. But it needs to be challenged.
Thank God Heather is doing that challenge here, in stating:
The average Canadian thinks of petroleum use in terms of pumping gas into their vehicle, and therefore subscribes to the fallacy that when we all drive electric vehicles, the need for fossil fuels will disappear. But there are infinite uses for hydrocarbons. They are an incredibly flexible, available, and useful molecule, and even when we stop using them for combustion
:
I appreciate the guidance that I'm getting from colleagues around the table. It shows you, Mr. Chair, that they underestimate the essential use that Canadian energy has to the national unity of Canadians, the health of their retirement and their savings, and how misguided their amendment to the motion has been. It's something that I think is absolutely relevant to get into, in terms of understanding the power of our energy sector and the ways it can be used to ensure the pensions of all Canadians.
If we had national unity around these issues, then this wouldn't even be an issue to begin with. If Albertans felt that their energy sector was taken seriously, unlike now, in which it's being denigrated by members across the way.... It is unsurprising, frankly. This has been their MO for quite some time—eight long years, I've been advised. That is how long they've been against our energy sector.
I am grateful to have the opportunity to introduce Dr. Exner-Pirot's work and her findings about how our fossil fuels and their molecules are “incredibly flexible, available, and useful...even when we stop using them for combustion, demand for them for other uses — plastic, textiles, rubber, packaging, detergents fertilizer — will continue to grow.” This is a bedrock of our national economic life and what feeds our pensions.
“They are also essential in the production of solar panels, wind turbine blades, batteries and thermal insulation” in our energy ingenuity, which is certainly something that Conservatives stand to support in promoting every aspect of our economic life.
Dr. Exner-Pirot continues, “Likewise, oilsands bitumen components like asphaltenes and resins are used in many products that light crude cannot provide, and can be developed into advanced material such as carbon fibre, which in turn could displace carbon-intensive steel.”
We're talking about the component parts of Canadian energy, the manufacturing process that feeds our pensions and in which our national unity needs to be upheld.
She says:
The more immediate question, however, is if we will stop using hydrocarbons for fuel. Here, the pragmatist must concede that the problem with fossil fuels is not the fuel per se, but the emissions. It is going to be far cheaper and faster to invest hundreds of billions of dollars into carbon capture, than it will be to replace tens of trillions of dollars worth of fossil fuel infrastructure with brand new energy systems.
LNG can already be produced and burned with very low emissions, and blue hydrogen (derived from natural gas) does even better. Japan and other countries that are pragmatic in their energy deliberations are already preparing for that version of the future.
Fossil fuels have been demonized....
“Demonized”, she writes. Demonized, she said, because she knows that this is part of the record of division that the Trudeau Liberals are imposing across this country.
She continues:
and so it has become popular to want to eliminate them, alongside Big Oil, as part of a just transition. That is not practical, in fact it's impossible. The smarter strategy—which Canada should be leading instead of sabotaging
—that's to the point of national unity—
is one that focuses relentlessly on eliminating the emissions caused by burning hydrocarbons, and using them for clean energy and materials instead.
That is the plan that Dr. Exner-Pirot suggested would strengthen our national unity in a time of great division. But this was a year ago. This was before Germany and Japan came to Canada, as a united country, and said “Listen, we need your energy. We want to create revenues for your country in a way that actually helps lower emissions around the world, helps your people be prosperous, helps to deflate the support that dictator oil has been leveraging around the world.” That is certainly something critical to the motion at hand.
I think even further about the kind of opportunity we have, as a country, were we an energy superpower. In fact, Heather Exner-Pirot published a piece in October of this year, just a month ago, where she said, “Canada could have been an energy superpower. Instead we became a bystander”.
This record of division has resulted in a country that has been weakened in its influence around the world. Liberals pretend that a trade agreement is the only antidote to solving the war in Ukraine when, frankly, our gas displacing Russian gas in Europe would defeat the Russians in one fell swoop.
So let's describe the kind of power that Canada could have as a united country. We could have been an energy superpower because the “Government”—the summary says—“has imposed a series of regulatory burdens on the energy industry, creating confusion, inefficiency and expense”.
This is the kind of division we see in the country. Allow me to venture deeper into this, because I think it's an argument worth reflecting on very carefully. This is the stuff that fuels our pensions. This is the stuff that fuels the retirement of every Canadian:
Oil arguably remains the most important commodity in the world today. It paved the way for the industrialization and globalization trends of the post-World War II era, a period that saw the fastest human population growth and largest reduction in extreme poverty ever. Its energy density, transportability, storability, and availability have made oil the world's greatest source of energy, used in every corner of the globe.
There are geopolitical implications inherent in a commodity of such significance and volume. The contemporary histories of Russia, Iran, Venezuela...Iraq [and others] are intertwined with their roles as major oil producers, roles [that] they have used to advance their (often illiberal) interests on the world stage. It is fair to ask why Canada has never seen fit to advance its own values and interests through its vast energy reserves. It is easy to conclude that its reluctance to do so has been a major policy failure.
I will comment here. It's a major policy failure with impact on our pensions and on our economic life, and a major policy failure with impacts on our national unity. Team Canada is certainly not team Canada. It's divided Canada. It's broken Canada. Yet this is despite the fact that, as Heather writes:
Canada has been blessed with the world's third largest reserves of oil, the vast majority of which are in the oil sands of northern Alberta
—my home province and Garnett's backyard—
although there is ample conventional oil across Western Canada and offshore Newfoundland and Labrador as well. The oil sands contain 1.8 trillion barrels of oil, of which just under 10 percent, or 165 billion barrels, are technically and economically recoverable with today's technology. Canada currently extracts over 1 billion barrels of that oil each year.
Just as an aside, when Germany came to Canada, they asked for our natural gas. Had we made that deal with them, the revenue to Canada—Dr. Christian Leuprecht and I have written about this—would be the sum total of $65 billion a day. In its entirety, that revenue to the Canadian treasury alone would be three times the national budget. It would help us pay down our debt. That one deal with Germany would have done so much good in this world.
Let's continue with Dr. Exner-Pirot's commentary here:
The technology necessary to turn the oil sands into bitumen that could then be exported profitably really took off in the early 2000s. Buoyed by optimism of its potential, then Prime Minister Stephen Harper pronounced in July 2006 that Canada would soon be an “energy superproducer.” A surge of investment came to the oil sands during the commodity supercycle of 2000-2014, which saw oil peak at a price of $147/barrel in 2008. For a few good years, average oil prices sat just below $100 a barrel. Alberta was booming until it crashed.
Two things happened that made Harper's prediction fall apart. The first was the shale revolution—the combination of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling that made oil from the vast shale reserves in the [U.S.] economical to recover. Until then, the US had been the world's biggest energy importer. In 2008 it was producing just 5 million barrels of crude oil a day, and had to import 10 million barrels a day to meet its ravenous need. Shale changed that, and the US is now the world's biggest oil producer, expecting to hit a production level of 12.4 million barrels a day in 2023.
The United States is now a competitor to Canada in energy production and, in this, it is a vital interest of ours to unlock that potential for our pensions, for our people, for our workers and for our country in every aspect of our national life.
Heather continues:
For producers extracting oil from the oil sands, the shale revolution was a terrible outcome. Just as new major oil sands projects were coming online and were producing a couple of million barrels a day, our only oil customer was becoming energy self-sufficient.
Because the [U.S.] was such a reliable and thirsty oil consumer, it never made sense for Canada to export its oil to any other nation, and the country never built the pipeline or export terminal infrastructure to do so. Our southern neighbour wanted all we produced. But the cheap shale oil that flooded North America in the 2010s made that dependence a huge mistake as other markets would have proven to be more profitable.
If shale oil took a hatchet to the Canadian oil industry, the election of the Liberals in 2015 brought on its death by a thousand cuts. For the last eight years, federal policies have incrementally and cumulatively damaged the domestic oil and gas sector. With the benefit of hindsight in 2023, it is obvious that this has had major consequences for global energy security, as well as opportunity costs for Canadian foreign policy.
This is a country that, when united, could be performing way above where we are today. She continues:
Once the shale revolution began in earnest, the urgency in the sector to be able to export oil to any other market than the United States led to proposals for the Northern Gateway, Energy East, and TMX pipelines. Opposition from Quebec and BC killed Energy East and Northern Gateway, respectively. The saga of TMX may finally end this year, as it is expected to go into service in late 2023, billions of dollars over cost and years overdue thanks to regulatory and jurisdictional hurdles.
Because Canada has been stuck selling all of its oil to the United States, it does so at a huge discount, known as a differential. That discount hit a staggering US$46 per barrel difference in October 2018, when [West Texas Intermediate] oil was selling for $57 a barrel, but we could only get $11 for [Western Canada Select]. The lack of pipelines and the resulting differential created losses to the Canadian economy of $117 billion between 2011 and 2018, according to Frank McKenna, former Liberal New Brunswick Premier and Ambassador to the United States, and now Deputy Chairman of TD Bank.
As an aside, these are people who understand how our economic life is managed and how our people can retire safely. Furthermore, she adds:
The story is not dissimilar with liquefied natural gas (LNG). While both the [U.S.] and Canada had virtually no LNG export capacity in 2015, the United States has since grown to be the world’s biggest LNG exporter, helping Europe divest itself of its reliance on Russian gas and making tens of billions of dollars in the process. Canada still exports none, with regulatory uncertainty and slow timelines killing investor interest. In fact, the United States imports Canadian natural gas—which it buys for the lowest prices in the world due to that differential problem—and then resells it to our allies for a premium.
We're being taken by the nose, because the is more interested in dividing Canadians rather than uniting us around our mutual success. Moreover, Heather notes:
Canada’s inability to build pipelines and export capacity is a major problem on its own. But the federal government has also imposed a series of regulatory burdens and hurdles on the industry, one on top of the other, creating confusion, inefficiency, and expense. It has become known in Alberta as a “stacked pancake” approach.
Let's now get into the anatomy of how the has divided Canadians and is undermining the unity of the country when it comes to our CPP or any other proposition that we have for the world. She states:
The first major burden was Bill C-48, the tanker moratorium.
Do you remember that one?
In case anyone considered reviving the Northern Gateway project, the Liberal government banned oil tankers from loading anywhere between the northernmost point of Vancouver Island to the BC-Alaska border. That left a pathway only for TMX, which goes through Vancouver, amidst fierce local opposition. I have explained it to my American colleagues this way: imagine if Texas was landlocked, and all its oil exports had to go west through California, but the federal government banned oil tankers from loading anywhere on the Californian coast except through ports in San Francisco. That is what C-48 did in Canada.
It's a brilliant analogy. Furthermore, she continues:
Added to Bill C-48 was Bill C-69, known colloquially as the “no new pipelines” bill and now passed as the Impact Assessment Act, which has successfully deterred investment in the sector. It imposes new and often opaque regulatory requirements, such as having to conduct a gender-based analysis before proceeding with new projects to determine how different genders will experience them: “a way of thinking, as opposed to a unique set of prescribed methods,” according to the federal government. It also provides for a veto from the Environment and Climate Change Canada Minister—currently, Steven Guilbeault—on any new in situ oil sands projects or interprovincial or international pipelines, regardless of the regulatory agency’s recommendation.
This is the division incarnate that has deployed against Alberta's energy sector, against Albertans and against the national unity that compels our CPP.
Heather continues:
The Alberta Court of Appeal has determined that the act is unconstitutional, and eight other provinces are joining in its challenge.
This is the image of a divided country.
But so far it is the law of the land, and
—for very good reason—
investors are allergic to it.
Federal carbon pricing, and Alberta’s federally compatible alternative for large emitters, the TIER (Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction) Regulation, was added next, though this regulation makes sense for advancing climate goals. It is the main driver for encouraging emission reductions, and includes charges for excess emissions as well as credits for achieving emissions below benchmark. It may be costly for producers, but from an economic perspective, of all the climate policies carbon pricing is the most efficient.
Industry has committed to their shareholders that they will reduce emissions; their social license and their investment attractiveness depends to some degree on it. The major oil sands companies have put forth a credible plan to achieve net zero emissions by 2050. One conventional operation in Alberta is already net zero thanks to its use of carbon capture technology. Having a predictable and recognized price on carbon is also providing incentives to a sophisticated carbon tech industry in Canada, which can make money by finding smart ways to sequester and use carbon.
Isn't it amazing that the energy sector that helps our country recover from economic calamity and from postpandemic planning is also the same sector that's leading innovation and energy transition technology? It's this ingenuity that needs to be unlocked that Heather describes so perfectly here.
She continues:
In theory, carbon pricing should succeed in reducing emissions in the most efficient way possible. Yet the federal government keeps adding more policies on top of carbon pricing. The Canadian Clean Fuel Standard, introduced in 2022, mandates that fuel suppliers must lower the “lifecycle intensity” of their fuels, for example by blending them with biofuels, or investing in hydrogen, renewables, and carbon capture. This standard dictates particular policy solutions, causes the consumer price of fuels to increase, facilitates greater reliance on imports of biofuels, and conflicts with some provincial policies.
Again, a policy of the federal government is pursuing division at every turn across this entire country.
Heather adds:
It is also puts new demands on North American refinery capacity, which is already highly constrained.
The newest but perhaps most damaging proposal is for an emissions cap, which seeks to reduce emissions solely from the oil and gas sector by 42 percent by 2030.
Listen. This is an all-out attack on common sense.
Moreover, Heather, says:
This target far exceeds what is possible with carbon capture in that time frame, and can only be achieved through a dramatic reduction in production. The emissions cap is an existential threat to Canada’s oil and gas industry, and it comes at a time when our allies are trying, and failing, to wean themselves off of Russian oil. The economic damage to the Canadian economy is hard to overestimate.
In fact, I would contend that what Dr. Exner-Pirot is describing here is how is helping Vladimir Putin fund his war machine against Ukrainians, and it's unconscionable that members across the way would just allow that to happen. At the end of the day, we cannot allow the Canadian Prime Minister to be a partner of Vladimir Putin in how he has been murdering and butchering innocent Ukrainians. This is something that you'd think members across the way would care about, but they're not even paying attention to what we're saying here in this moment.
Heather notes:
Oil demand is growing, and even in the most optimistic forecasts it will continue to grow for another decade before plateauing. Our European and Asian allies are already dangerously reliant on Russia and Middle Eastern states for their oil. American shale production is peaking, and will soon start to decline. Low investment levels in global oil exploration and production, due in part to ESG (environmental, social, and governance) and climate polices, are paving the way for shortages by mid-decade.
An energy crisis is looming. Canada is not too late to be the energy superproducer the democratic world needs in order to prosper and be secure. We need more critical minerals, hydrogen, hydro, and nuclear power. But it is essential that we export globally significant levels of oil and LNG as well, using carbon capture, utilization, and storage...wherever possible.
Heather concludes:
Meeting this goal will require a very different approach than the one currently taken by the federal government: it must be an approach that encourages growth and exports even as emissions are reduced. What the government has done instead is deter investment, dampen competitiveness, and hand market share to Russia and OPEC.
This is the devastating cost that the division of and his NDP-Liberals had on our Canadian national unity. This is the type of indictment of the kind of leadership that has created problems that we didn't need to deal with had there been in the Alberta energy sector a partner in the national government.
It was partner that was part of team Canada, part of defeating Russia's war in Ukraine, part of lowering emissions internationally, part of economic reconciliation with our first nations, and part of a healthy and vibrant pension life for our people. It was to provide stability and security of a social safety net for the most vulnerable, and part of being allied with workers, so they can get shovels in the ground—
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I just want to commend my new colleague from Calgary Heritage for his excellent contribution to this conversation. I'd like to thank him and just highlight to the good people of Calgary Heritage that they elected a fine man to succeed in a constituency, Mr. Chair, that has had some fine individuals, including Mr. Bob Benzen, whom I had the pleasure of working with on the environment committee for a period of time, and also Mr. Stephen Harper, the former prime minister and somebody who understood something that I'm going to talk about here, something that will be, I think, very complementary to the points that my colleague here has shared: what national unity is, how it needs to be shepherded well and how policy decisions made in our nation's capital can have a devastating effect on that.
Certainly, Shuv, you have big shoes to fill. However, I certainly appreciate your contributions here to this discussion, and I think that they highlight how important it is to the substance of what we're talking about here.
We have a motion that seems to have been brought forward for little other reason than to further divide Canadians. The Conservatives have brought forward what I think is a very common-sense amendment that would highlight the fact that the government is doing just that. It is playing the games of fear and division. It is pitting region against region. Mr. Chair, as I expand on this just slightly, the key point that needs to be made here is that it goes back to the very foundations of what our country is.
If I could go back to the founding document now known as the Constitution Act, 1867—what was initially known as the British North America Act—it laid out or developed a framework that is very relevant to the discussions that we have daily in this place.
Over the many clauses of the BNA Act—or Constitution Act, 1867—we have this tension that was intentionally developed. We had an understanding that what were then quite divided colonies in what is now Canada—initially four, the recent addition after that, of course, being Prince Edward Island and then further provinces joined the federation after that.... A series of colonial governments brought forward a wide range of diverse concerns.
Now, the idea of a unified state was not new in the lead-up to 1867. It had been tried a number of times. There was a whole host of different mechanisms and things that had been brought forward and tested out, so to speak, Mr. Chair, that had various levels of success. In the lead-up to 1867, there was the acknowledgement amongst a very diverse range of ideas brought around the table to those whom we know are the fathers of confederation—and to the many others who participated in that process, many of whom are lost to history, including indigenous voices, women who were key and central players in that.... The process of getting to the point where we had, ultimately, the BNA Act that created the foundation of our country was an understanding of something that is incredibly relevant to what we're discussing here today, and it is that we have to have that ability to respect different regions of our country, that we will have different ideas, different belief systems, different languages. There will be a series of differences that would be easy to point to as dividing factors in what created problems with the various iterations of trying to unite the colonies that make up what we now know as Canada here today.
What was acknowledged was that we could have the ability to respect diverse voices around the metaphorical table while ensuring that there was a strong governmental structure. I can only imagine, Mr. Chair, what many of those conversations would have looked like around those meetings in which they would have been hashing out the ideas that have led to the country that we now know and love today as Canada. Those would have decided what areas would be under federal jurisdiction and what areas would be under provincial jurisdiction, with the understanding of where cities and municipalities and counties would play a role in that and they would have developed that structure to ensure that it responded to the dynamics that the world faced at the time, which was very notable.
In fact, it is said that one of the reasons Ottawa was chosen as the capital for the new country of Canada was the military and strategic importance of its being situated on the dividing line between what were then Upper and Lower Canada, the French and the English, the Catholics and the Protestants. It was a strategic place, but it also had military merit: It was a former barracks on top of a hill with a good view.
At the time, the Americans faced a host of domestic challenges and they were very much focused inward on them. During those days and especially in the years leading up to 1867, there was a fear. I say fear because I think that accurately articulates that there was a possibility that the Americans at the time might have looked outward to expand their empire, and the result was this understanding that we had to have a strong federation, with the idea of a federation being strategic.
I can only imagine the many conversations among the Fathers of Confederation. They would have looked at contemporary examples at that point in time, which would have included the United States republic as a constitutional republic, and the way democracy played in that. Of course, we take a lot—in fact, the opening words of the British North America Act speak very much about its being a government modelled in principle after that of the United Kingdom, but understanding that there were differences because our country was vast.
Geographically it is vast. The divisions that exist are significant and they have been significant since long before our nation was a country. But as the tension was found to determine what would be an appropriate balance of power between provinces and a federal government, the national state, and what that would look like, not only in the context of the initial four colonies that became early Canada but also in the context of understanding that there was potential to see Canada grow and expand—and understanding in fact the Latin motto for our country, the rough English translation of which is “from sea to sea”—and understanding that there was that desire, that dream to unify a vast space of land that, although so very diverse, could be unified together.
Those battles were fought, and then that continued. Mr. Chair, I won't go into the many hard-fought and the more peaceful examples, but, of course, it hasn't always been peaceful. We had elements of revolution. I'm sure there are many Canadians watching, Mr. Chair, who would think back to their social studies curriculum or history curriculum, depending on the province, and they would think of Louis Riel and the battles that took place around 1886. In fact, Louis Riel's name is on one of the bronze plaques showing elected members of Parliament, although he never had the chance to take his seat. How he was able to sign the scrolls is quite a story, actually. His name is on one of those bronze plaques that we all have the honour of having our name on, something in which we join with these icons of Canadian history, that being one of so many examples.
In my home province of Alberta, there were intense negotiations and certainly a host of varying opinions. In fact, we quite often will hear the story of the proposal for a province of Buffalo. “Buffalo” echoes the historical large mammal somewhat. For those around this room who may not be familiar, it's like a cow but much bigger and with horns. It's a wild animal that defined much of the landscape. There was this idea that there could be this united province of Buffalo.
In fact, Mr. Chair, I found it very interesting, when earlier this year I posted a picture of a historical cairn that is located in my constituency. It's actually on a corner of what used to be a number of administrative districts in what was then known as the “northwest territories”. The conversation that ensued and the people reaching out having seen this post on Facebook and Instagram was fascinating. It was quite incredible to be able to dive into some of the elements of that history.
In 1905, when Alberta and Saskatchewan were added to the federation, it was with a great deal of optimism. I've had the chance to be involved in politics for a little while now and one thing I like to do when looking back at historical events is to look at the newspaper headlines of the time. Having read the headlines of the newspapers for both the province of Alberta and the province of Saskatchewan.... In fact, they were not daily newspapers. In some cases it was actually a few days after these provinces became a part of the federation that an incredible amount of optimism was felt. There was the understanding and the ability to see growth as a united country, even though we were very different.
Mr. Chair, that has not always been an easy process. I'll get into the reason I wanted to briefly take us through this history. It's because it leads towards something that was a hard lesson learned, Mr. Chair.
In 1905, when the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan were added to the federation, the optimism associated with that was tempered somewhat over the coming decades. It was learned that although the Fathers of Confederation had worked diligently to determine the balance and tension that exists to ensure that while we have a strong federal government, there would be respect for our regional governments—or provincial governments, as they are known in Canada—there was a missing element to that when the Laurier government brought forward the amendment to the Constitution that added Alberta and Saskatchewan. It excluded the administration of natural resources, which is why this is such a relevant part of this conversation.
A host of reasons were discussed at the time. One can look back from the perspective of the 21st century here in 2023 and determine whether or not it was politics or whether it was because it was a Liberal prime minister. Certainly I've heard that from many constituents, who look back at the Liberals governing our country and the attacks on the west that have taken place that seem to define much of Liberal governments.
Some reasons were articulated, but the provinces did not have the ability to manage their own resources. That was added a couple of decades later. In fact, I think it was two and half decades after that when there was this understanding that the provinces should be treated equally.
To the many who I'm sure are watching this, there were very few exceptions. One exception was representation in the Senate and the other was the specific note in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which is of course the Constitution Act of 1982. Otherwise, all provinces in this country are treated the same. That's part of the strength here and what is building the foundation for what I trust will be a point that truly moves the needle on ending the division that and his Liberal governments have perpetrated upon our country.
The provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan pushed to ensure that they could in fact have that equal status. Then we fast forward half a century or so, Mr. Chair, to the constitutional negotiations and what ultimately ended up being the repatriation of the Constitution and the passing of the Constitution Act, 1982, which renamed the British North America Act to the Constitution Act, 1867. There are a host of other constitution acts as well, although they're not as well known, because they have to deal with either the entry of a province to the federation or a host of other amendments that have taken place from time to time.
Mr. Chair, this is to highlight how important the lead-up to 1982 was. The premier of Alberta at the time, Peter Lougheed, spent a great deal of time in negotiations. This is where we have this tension that exists. Again, this was at the conclusion of Pierre Elliott Trudeau's time as prime minister—although he did lose and spent I think it was about 15 months on a short hiatus when Joe Clark's Progressive Conservatives had won a minority government. Ultimately, they lost in a confidence vote when they recalled Parliament. Then, of course John Turner was the successor to Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
Many Canadians have not had the opportunity...and I would suggest it's something that is very valuable and speaks to the larger context of why so many Albertans were terrified of the thought of having another Trudeau in office. It's because when Pierre Elliott Trudeau first started the conversation, it's not that it was a new conversation. It had various iterations, looking back at some past news articles about what that did look like from time to time. When those conversations started, what was imagined by the machinations of Pierre Elliott Trudeau to what ended up being the negotiated agreement that resulted in the Constitution Act,1982, was very different. It is quite stark, actually. I didn't have a chance to bring with me some of those documents. Let me just enlighten members of the committee a little bit on this, specifically Liberal members, because this is their party's legacy. It would have radically reshaped our country in a way that would make it virtually unrecognizable.
Now, I certainly have very little respect for Pierre Elliott Trudeau. I'll get into some of the more contemporary reasons for that here in a few moments.
One of the noteworthy figures in that negotiation was then Alberta premier Peter Lougheed. I happen to know some of his family members. I've heard some of the stories about their uncle and the process that was the constitutional negotiations. It is a fascinating thing to be able to look back and to understand the hard-fought way in which the balance of power among the different levels of government in our country was maintained. I certainly credit Peter Lougheed for working so diligently to ensure that could take place. That laid the foundation for much of the prosperity that Alberta and all of Canada has seen over the last four decades or so.
Mr. Chair, it was those negotiations that had started...and there was a significant push-back from provinces, political activists, academics and constitutional lawyers.
I had the opportunity to spend some time at my alma mater after winning a scholarship named after the late Mel Smith, who was one of those figures involved in some of those constitutional negotiations.
I can tell you, Chair, it is fascinating. It is a drive through history that provides such extraordinary context. It makes me, quite frankly, proud to be Canadian and truly honoured to be a part of the political process. It speaks to the way that we've come to agreement in this country. It doesn't always mean that we agree, but it means that we're willing to sit down, negotiate, come to an understanding and figure out something that works for everybody. Whether that be prior to 1867, and the tension that existed in trying to figure out what would be federal responsibility and what would be provincial responsibility, or what they should even call the country, was all part of those negotiations that came forward and trying to figure out exactly what things would look like.
Of course, we have the history of treaties, and, Mr. Chair, I could go on at length, and I'll spare the committee this, but it is fascinating to look into some of the—in some cases—pre-Confederation history of where the treaties with indigenous people come from and the processes through which those were brought about. What's very interesting, Mr. Chair, is that actually adds to the strength of what our country is. We've seen this ability to take differences and be able to have those tough conversations to figure things out.
It doesn't mean that it's always been done well, don't mistake that for one second, but, certainly, when it comes to.... In fact, there's another historical cairn—and you'll forgive me, Mr. Chair, if I'm very proud of the area I represent—where there's this area, and it's on a lake known as Sounding Lake in the eastern part of my constituency, and it's in what is Treaty No. 6 territory. In I believe it was 1884—although don't quote me on that date—it was around that time in the 1880s when the plains were vast and outside of a few settlers and the indigenous peoples, there was not a lot there.
In fact, I had read a book at one point that articulated what it would have been like if you had taken an airplane and flown over the vastness of the North American plains prior to the construction of the railways and what we know as modern settlements. It would have been vast, it would have been largely unpopulated, although, certainly, there were a host of very advanced cultures within our indigenous communities and the Métis, a very proud legacy. And the conversation around Métis and Métis communities in Alberta will accentuate the point I'm trying to make that is so closely related to the amendment at hand and the motion that's been brought forward by the Liberals. It speaks to how in the 1880s we truly saw thousands, and this historical cairn on the beautiful shores of Sounding Lake....
Sounding Lake, although it's called a lake, it's truly just a large slough and at different points of the year, depending on how much rainfall there has been, that will determine whether or not there's water. That's not a new phenomenon, at different points in history there's been water in it, and at different points in history there hasn't. That history goes back long before modern weather tracking, but includes the oral tradition of indigenous peoples who lived in the area.
In the 1880s when there was a gathering of I believe—and I'm going from memory, here—6,000 indigenous people plus a couple of thousand of those who were then known as the “white man”, but settlers who were there....
Mr. Chair, just as I was on this cairn, it's on a little bit of a knoll on the edge of what is called Sounding Lake, it was incredible to think about some of the context, which I'm endeavouring to highlight here, about what our country is and the foundations that allow us to, in the midst of a diversity of opinions and thoughts, be able to bring forward an ability to be united, and that's the point here. Mr. Chair, as we look back to a century after that point, back to the negotiations that led up to the 1982 Constitution Act, we saw that specifically, Peter Lougheed spent an inordinate amount of time and led the country in fighting to ensure that specifically resources remain the sole jurisdiction of the province. The result was after that was passed, the Constitution was brought home and, of course, there was the signing ceremony with the late Queen Elizabeth and the pomp and circumstance associated with that and the continuing development of what Canada could be, that hard-fought tension that was found between what the federal and provincial governments, different levels of government, should be.
Mr. Chair, we have to be able to look back just before 1982 and something that is incredibly important, and it is something that my constituents know very well. I will admit, this was something that happened long before I was born, in fact, I know there are a number of my colleagues here who probably were not born yet.
I won't suggest who probably was.
A voice: You have [Inaudible—Editor].
Mr. Damien Kurek: No, it's just an acknowledgement of fact.
Long before I was born, it was something that became synonymous with the frustration many Albertans face with our national government here in Ottawa. It still elicits a strong emotional response. In fact, if you go to a coffee shop in Battle River—Crowfoot—the area I am so proud to represent, with 110,000 people over about 53,000 square kilometres of beautiful east-central Alberta countryside—and mention the national energy program, Mr. Chair, there will be a strong response. People will have strong opinions. I'd like to get into the reason for that.
At the time, there was acknowledgement that Alberta was starting to see a tremendous amount of prosperity. Largely, this came about because of the discovery of conventional oil reserves. I would encourage the Liberal and NDP members specifically to take note of my talking about “conventional oil reserves”, because I'm going to make a differentiation that is absolutely key to the discussion of both the amendment at hand and the motion that is meant to divide. The discovery of conventional oil reserves meant we could find, drill for and produce oil that could be sold on the global market in a very economical way. The result was the beginning of the unprecedented prosperity brought about as a result of this. What's very interesting....
I will take a small detour here. My late grandfather Kurek, who was very proud to be one of.... This speaks to another issue I'll get to at some point, which is LNG. LNG is simply liquefied—
:
Look, what I do find very concerning is this. I've been quite clear—I would be happy to go into more detail, but I think, for the sake of brevity, I will not—as to why this is all so very relevant to the conversation at hand. That's specifically to the amendment, but also to the larger motion, where we see that this , under his Liberal government.... The parliamentary secretary has moved this motion, which is interesting to begin with, because that's very different from how Justin Trudeau promised he would run things in Parliament when he was first elected. I'll get into more detail on his understanding of, or his politicalization of, the way in which Parliament works. I'll certainly get into that a little bit later.
Mr. Chair, I think the reason to be concerned is this. When I was talking about the history and about the conversation we are having about this motion...which is not unprecedented. It's something that we have seen built up over time. Specifically, we are talking about the son of a former prime minister.
I was talking about my late grandfather Kurek, because there's a very, very clear connection to the issue at hand. In the late 1960s, he had the opportunity to be part of the construction. Later, for most of his life, he worked for a number of different gas companies. It was one of the first large-scale natural gas production facilities in that area of the province, although not the first natural gas facility. I would highlight that Viking, Alberta, claims to have one of the first. It's quite fascinating. There's a beautiful mural, actually, on a wall there. I'd encourage members, if they're ever going through Viking, home of the Sutter family, to stop and take a look at some of that history.
The reason it's so relevant to the issue at hand is that we started to see the responsible development of Alberta resources, which I am proud my family was part of. I talk often about the farming history I have in my family. I won't get into the specifics here as to why I'm so proud of that, because we're talking about resource development. My family's story is like that of those of so many other Albertans—getting to see the building of an industry that has led to an unprecedented level of prosperity not only for Albertans and a few families but also truly for our country. We should be proud of that prosperity.
Quite frankly, I find it incredibly disappointing that the Liberals would be somehow ashamed of the context this provides to the country that we have here today. I attempted to briefly articulate the history related to the division of different levels of government and the tension—I use the word “tension” specifically—that is meant to exist between different levels of government. It doesn't mean there needs to be agreement, but it means there needs to be that understanding that in the midst of disagreement, there can be the ability to work together.
Take the example of my family, which is like that of so many others. My late grandfather Kurek worked his entire life as a gas operator and was very, very proud of that. It led to my father having a pretty good life. It was a regular middle-class life.
I would just note something that I think is very, very interesting. When we saw the introduction of natural gas to the community of Consort, we saw a radical change take place.
This is especially relevant because it speaks to how, as natural resources were developed, we saw the ability to transition from things like coal to more energy-efficient, safer types of energy. Consort, because of its proximity to what is the Gooseberry Lake gas plant, which my late grandfather Kurek helped build and then operated there for much of his life, speaks to that connection to history.
Now, as we see that there are these connections to the resource sector, we saw that the elder Trudeau, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, inflicted a level of division on this country that we are still reeling from.
That is often summed up—as I've mentioned before, if you go to a coffee shop in Battle River—Crowfoot—in a palatable frustration that exists about how Alberta was disregarded, ignored and intentionally targeted by its government in Ottawa, and that's not just for individuals who are born significantly before me who experienced it and lived through it.
It was in the form of the national energy program. You saw the beginning stages of just an amazing level of prosperity that Alberta was starting to see, and the potential and the entrepreneurial spirit that defined so much of why I am so proud to be from the province of Alberta, and you saw that shut down, stamped out by a heavy-handed government in the nation's capital.
I've been so rudely interrupted a couple of times now in making that very clear connection between the amendment we are discussing and the larger conversation around Ms. Bendayan's motion that is so specifically designed to not bring our country together but rather divide Canadians against each other. In this case, it's to divide Albertans against the rest of the country, to divide in every way possible.
I do find it really funny—and maybe this is because Justin Trudeau believes that Canada is a post-national state—that they don't believe in the idea of Canada. I find it really concerning, Mr. Chair, that you would have members of the Liberal Party who would be so offended by the fact that my story—as would be the case, I would expect, with every person around this table, every member of Parliament in the unique journey they take to be a part of Canada's House of Commons—speaks to what we are as Canadians.
Now the members opposite.... Why this is so directly relevant to the issue at hand is that members opposite are making this a concern for our country, which is a fair comment to make. The fact that they would deny the stories of Canadians to be a part of this conversation truly is an astounding revelation of the attitude with which the Liberals approach the governing of our country.
Mr. Chair, whether it's my family and my late Grandfather Kurek, who I spoke very, very briefly about, or whether it be other members, I know quite well that my Conservative team members here, all of them, have incredible stories that lend to the idea that has built Canada, specifically the infrastructure associated with that.
Mr. Chair, when we are talking about the divisions being brought to our country by a government that is so bent on ensuring that it push forward on policies like the carbon tax that have a direct impact on the livelihoods of Canadians.... Mr. Chair, I would venture back, if I could, to 2015. The conversation surrounding the carbon tax directly relates to this motion here because it's the consequences of the policies of this Liberal government and its attitude toward how it governs this country that have led to an untenable situation.
In 2015, in the conversation around the carbon tax, the then leader of the Liberal Party and now Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, time and time again, when asked about some of the intricacies about how the carbon tax would be applied, Mr. Chair, made it clear throughout the course of that campaign, for example, that he would not impose his will, the federal government's will, on Canadians and that he would not be overstepping his bounds as Prime Minister.
Yet, we saw how, even in the early days of the Liberals' mandate post-2015, provincial governments no longer mattered. We saw that the Liberals would do anything and everything they could to trample upon provinces, to trample upon any person, any group or any jurisdiction that did not fulfill their political objective. We see that very, very clearly with the carbon tax.
Mr. Chair, if I could, I'll take you back to one of the first meetings that the then environment minister, Catherine McKenna, had with her provincial counterparts. The press release, the invitation to that meeting, very clearly said that they wanted to come together to discuss climate action and actions on the environment.
However, Mr. Chair, what was interesting.... It was actually Scott Moe, who was the environment minister for the Province of Saskatchewan at the time, who attended that meeting. When he walked into that meeting, he found something, and it was not a collaborative environment, not a minister who was willing to listen, not a government that was looking out for the best interests of the country and willing to collaborate with its jurisdictional partners.
For the sake of brevity, Chair, I won't go into it, although there are members here who are different from those who were here Monday night. I talked a little about some of our history. It is relevant to dive back into the history of what led to the formation of how Canada is meant to operate as country. When Premier Scott Moe, who was the then Saskatchewan environment minister, walked into that meeting, he learned quickly that it was not meant to be one of collaboration. It was not meant to be one of discussion. He walked into that meeting and found that the Liberal minister, led by the Prime Minister and those activists who seem to control the Prime Minister's Office, had been handed instructions as to what they would and would not accept. At the time, it made quite a bit of news. The then environment minister of the Province of Saskatchewan, Scott Moe, actually walked out of the meeting. When asked by the media, he ironically said something that echoes throughout our history: “Just watch me.”
Mr. Philip Lawrence: I remember that.
Mr. Damien Kurek: It was quite a moment.
Chair, it was interesting that with the then environment minister—and I know the former Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall quite well—there was a willingness to develop those relationships to work together for the good of our country. Although they might have disagreed on the politics—and I can assure you that Brad Wall and do not agree on very much when it comes to politics—there was a willingness and an understanding, with Justin Trudeau having just won the election, that there was a need to work together. However, that only went in one direction.
Chair, what is so disgusting, quite frankly, is that we have seen an erosion of national unity that has taken place over the last eight or so years that has been Prime Minister. There has been an erosion of national unity, Chair, because we have seen, continually, how the Prime Minister does not care about our nation's unity, does not care about ensuring a prosperous Canada for all, but rather he's quick to hold some back so that he can pick winners and losers. The result, Mr. Chair, is a divided country.
The reason I talk about the carbon tax, and specifically the way the then leader of the Liberal Party—the third party at the time—talked about the carbon tax, is that he promised it would be a collaborative process. Yet, we saw that, the moment he was elected, it was nothing more than talk. If I could give credit to the Liberals for one thing—I apologize to my Conservative colleagues—it is that they are good at politics. They are good at the rhetoric, good at saying the right things at the right time and good at the strategy associated with that.
Chair, the ultimate reason that is not a compliment is they are so good at politics for the purposes of attaining power that they are leaving our country divided and weaker as a result. To my friends across the table in the Liberal Party, being good at politics is not enough to be good at governing the country. You have to be willing to work together. We've seen time and time again that they are simply incapable of doing that.
Mr. Chair, the carbon tax is a good example. We had a number of provincial governments elected throughout the last eight years that specifically opposed the carbon tax. You would think that would be a valid question that a provincial government could run on, especially after I read the Supreme Court ruling on that. If I could sum it up in the fact that—
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Of course, it is good to be able to continue this conversation. I was a little surprised actually that the Liberals denied consent to allow this meeting to continue because I was happy to continue talking about the divisions that Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has inflicted upon our country. Chair, let me just highlight a couple of examples of this.
On the very human level, when I speak with constituents an increasingly common sentiment that I hear, and this is tragic, is that my constituents feel that Canada is broken. In many cases, Chair, they will share things with me like they're simply not sure about whether our country has a future. In fact, there are some who feel like there's no option but to see that the consequences of disunity could be absolutely devastating to the future of our country.
Chair, the reason why that's so tragic is that it could have been avoided and should be the priority of any leader and any member of a governing party. Their first priority in government should be national unity. Yet we have seen over the last eight years an intention of dividing Canadians for narrow political gain. In fact, we saw that just this past week in how the Liberals intentionally included in a free trade agreement with Ukraine a carbon tax mechanism. It's shameful that they would be so intent on division that they do this even with a country at war. To play that sort of politics is absolutely shameful. Chair, I have the court ruling here on the Impact Assessment Act, and we see that it was found to be largely unconstitutional, Bill .
This should be no surprise to anybody who has listened to commentary on this subject over the last six or so years since this was introduced. Every province—in fact the only thing we see provinces united in these days it seems is that they're united against the actions of Justin Trudeau, and that's certainly not a record that one should be proud of. I talked about the carbon tax. It has intentionally divided Canadians, including I mentioned the Canada-Ukraine Free Trade Agreement. It was the Conservatives who initially negotiated that back in 2013. In fact, it was Stephen Harper who looked Vladimir Putin in the face and told him to get out of Ukraine. That's leadership, not like what we have seen by this division perpetrated by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
We've see the carbon tax and this recent carve-out that benefits 3% of Canadians. It continues to punish the other 97% of Canadians, including those who are struggling to pay their heating bills for propane, natural gas and other forms of energy that are still subject to that. We see that intention to divide. In conversations around equalization where there should be the willingness to have real conversations with provinces, we have not seen that under Justin Trudeau. He may talk big about a photo op, but then when it comes to what happens behind closed doors, it's division and pitting region against region. We see that with the continued conversation around the emissions cap.
Chair, I could only imagine if the Prime Minister was to pick any other part of the country and tell them that they cannot do what they are good at. Could you imagine any other sector, whether it be manufacturing or whatever the case may be, pick a part of the country and if the federal government was to swoop in and say you can't do what you're good at.... Mr. Chair, it is absolutely shameful the division that is being perpetrated on this country by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Liberals.
We see that with the Keystone XL. This is the tragic irony, Chair, especially with the Keystone XL pipeline. The Alberta portion of that pipeline is in my constituency, and I saw about 2,000 jobs lost because our Liberal Prime Minister refused to work with his American counterpart because they were so blinded by ideology around the future of energy security in North America that they cancelled the pipeline at a time when Conservatives were vocally saying the entire time that energy security would be key to our world's security future. Yet, we see that the Liberals capitulated. We see that with the just transition, a policy that is designed to divide Canadians for narrow political gain. We see this with LNG.
Again, there were, I think, 18 projects on the books when Justin Trudeau took office. Never before in Canadian history.... Whether it be Canada's fiscal situation, whether it be with the economic opportunities, Justin Trudeau was handed a circumstance that any world leader would be jealous of, yet he squandered it away for narrow political gain.
Chair, the reason that this is so applicable to the conversation we are having today around this amendment and the motion is because the Liberals, throughout the last eight years, have led our country to a point where Canadians are pitted against one another and where there is division layered upon division. The result is that we have seen less prosperity.
The result is that we have seen political divisions that are incredibly harmful. In fact, just this past week, you had Liberals who were almost incoherent because Canadians would dare question that they were concerned about the activist environment minister—the same environment minister who was criminally charged for environmental activism—who would try to influence so-called independent senators, although they certainly showed their hand in the last week. Members of that Liberal party were so outraged that Canadians would dare to share an opinion that contradicted their official narrative. It is truly unbelievable and shameful.
Chair, many of my constituents, as I shared at the last meeting, remember Pierre Elliott Trudeau and the divisions perpetrated upon our country. In fact, I often still hear—Rick would probably remember some of those days, as I wasn't born yet—that many are not surprised that the son of Pierre Elliott Trudeau would continue along that path where he—you've heard of the Trudeau salute—would continue to divide this country for political gain.
It is unbelievable. It is unacceptable, and Canadians deserve better.
Chair, I hope for this committee that Liberal, NDP and Bloc members will take seriously this common-sense amendment to try to take some of the language of division, the politics of division, out of this motion, which has been brought forward for no other reason than to continue perpetrating that division upon Canadians, east versus west, north versus south, urban versus rural and, in this case, the rest of the country against Alberta.
I look forward to continuing the discussion on this. I hope that this committee will see that better is possible, that we can bring home a country that is once again unified. However, the history of the last eight years certainly does not give me and my constituents optimism in that regard. That is why we so desperately need a change. We need a government that is willing to put the unity of our country ahead of personal partisan political goals, and as we increasingly see with the number of scandals that seem to be making Liberal insiders rich, their personal financial interests.
Thank you very much, Chair, for this opportunity. Certainly I'd be happy to expand further on the connection between this amendment and the history that has led to the point we're at today, and I certainly will do so. As I cede my time to the next person on the list, I would ask to be put back on the list so that we can continue this conversation.
Thanks, Chair.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm certainly glad to have the opportunity to weigh in on the question of the Canada pension plan. I will start by talking a little bit about the plan. There has been a lot of discussion around the table so far, particularly by Conservative members, but there hasn't actually been a lot of talk about the Canada pension plan.
I think the Canada pension plan has been an excellent thing for Canadians. The only deficiency in the plan, as far as I'm concerned, is that we're not paying enough into it to get a larger benefit out of it. When the Canada pension plan was designed, it was meant to be only a third of Canadians' retirement income. It has been an incredible success in terms of what it was designed to be, which is just a third of what people would need to get by in retirement.
The other third was to be a company pension. The final third was to come from Canadians' own personal savings and investments.
We live in a Canada today where over 70% of people working at a job don't have a company pension plan of any kind, whether it's a defined contribution plan or a defined benefit plan. Right there, when we're talking about the Canada pension plan and what it was designed to be—to work in concert with a company pension and personal savings—we know that the Canada pension plan won't get people through their retirement because they don't have that other leg of the three-legged stool that was supposed to be the foundation of Canadians' retirement income.
I think that's a problem. Employers should be exhorted and pushed to bring back company pensions or we need to recognize that the CPP now is meant to provide at least two-thirds of Canadians' retirement income. We don't have a Canada pension plan that is built to provide two-thirds of Canadians' retirement income.
I would say that the CPP was designed for a system that no longer pertains. We either need to considerably expand the Canada pension plan or develop a strategy for pushing more employers to offer their own pension plans to employees.
When we look at the third leg of the stool and at the affordability crisis we are facing today.... Frankly, from the early 1990s on, real wages have not kept pace with the pace of inflation. Even when inflation was at target, wages did not grow as quickly as the price that people were paying for housing. For as much as the housing crisis has accelerated over the past two or three years, it's a 30-year trajectory that has led us to where we are. It's on an exponential curve.
For those at home who aren't familiar with exponential curves, the further you go on the curve, the more quickly things rise. As we continue on this exponential crisis curve, it's not a surprise to see that prices are increasing more and more every year.
Canada still isn't addressing some of the fundamental causes of the housing crisis. What that means for Canadians' personal savings and their ability to buy RRSPs, to invest or to just sock away cash, is that it diminishes as the cost of groceries, food, prescription drugs and everything else goes up. That means the third leg of that stool is also in bad shape.
The good thing about the CPP is that the premiums are taken from employers. They're taken off the cheques of Canadian workers before that money enters into their accounts, so Canadians aren't forced to bid that money to increase the price of a home to get it over that of either the other Canadians' or the investor they are competing against to get a home. The money people make as part of their wage package has not contributed to inflation in housing because it's already getting socked away in a pension plan and is not available to bid on the cost of the home. That's also been a great benefit to Canadians.
The only solid leg of the retirement savings three-legged stool that's supposed to get Canadians through retirement that is in any kind of good shape is the Canadian pension plan. It is in very good shape. They are required to have regular actuarial reports that pronounce on the state of the Canada pension plan. That plan is in good shape for the next 75 years-plus.
Over the last 10 years, it's seen an average return of 10%. Many Canadians who have private investments through mutual funds and other things like that would be very happy to see a 10% return over the last 10 years.
That return is partly because of the size of the Canada pension plan. It means that it can play in investment space that smaller mutual funds can't, and it's also able to spread the risk over all of the Canadians who work in the labour market, which is millions of them. I don't have the exact number, but if you think of the 40 million Canadians, most of them are going to participate in the workforce at some time in their life, and they are going to pay into the CPP. That means spreading the risk across everyone in Canada, whereas normally, if you invest in a fund, you don't have that big a fund. This is going to be relevant too when we talk about Alberta deciding to have its own pension plan if, indeed, that's where the Conservative government in Alberta wants to go.
The CPP is the only part of the Canadian retirement savings edifice that's in good shape. It does that in part by sharing risk over a larger group of people. Say, you ask someone this: Would you like to be in a pension plan with 10,000 members, would you like to be in a pension plan with 100,000 members, would you like to be in a pension plan with a million members, or 40 million members? I think most Canadians are going to say, “I'd like to be in the plan with 40 million members, because, wow, is that ever going to allow me to spread the risk across lots more people.” It's going to allow their pension fund to make investments that are more likely to get a return and to spread risk across the portfolio. That's one of the great benefits.
Moreover, there's another great benefit of the Canada pension plan. Because it applies to all workers no matter where they live and work in the country—with the exception of Quebec, of course, which has its own plan—it's fully portable. Now, that has been an advantage to Canadian workers, who have had to go to other provinces to secure work, but ultimately want to retire in their home province. It has also been an incredible advantage to employers who have wanted to secure labour from other parts of the country when their own province hasn't been able to meet the labour need. It has meant that people don't have to compromise on their pension in order to go to work in another part of the country.
I think the portability of the CPP as well as its ability to spread risk are two very important advantages.
There's another advantage to having the Canada pension plan that I'm going to highlight today. I talked earlier about how over 70% of Canadians working today don't have any pension plan at all, but for those who do, often and more and more as time goes on, there are defined contribution plans.
What that means is the whole risk of the pension lies on the worker. If the investments don't turn out, that means a reduced benefit for the worker, whereas in a defined benefit plan the workers are guaranteed a certain benefit that they can bank on, that they can budget with.
We know when it comes to the CPP that that defined benefits have not been growing quickly enough to make up for rising costs, and Canadians, who are depending only on their CPP.... Again, that would be true for a larger and larger share of workers who haven't had a company pension as they retire. They've struggled to be able to put money away, while they're trying to pay the rent and the groceries. But their CPP amount will be the same amount, and even though it doesn't grow fast enough, it will grow by predictable measures. That is an incredible benefit to Canadians and another reason why, in my view, we should be talking about expanding the Canada pension plan. I think it's really unfortunate that the major debate we're having about the Canada pension plan right now is about shrinking it by having the Province of Alberta exit.
I disagree strongly with Premier Smith in Alberta, who has been driving this. I think there's a lot of public opinion polling showing that this isn't actually something Albertans are calling for. This is something that the government is trying to create a desire for in the province of Alberta. I don't believe that will be good for Albertans, and I don't believe it will be good for Canadians in the rest of the country, because the CPP is an excellent plan for all the reasons I have just mentioned.
So, what are the problems with Danielle Smith's plan, or what she's proposing? Well, there's a LifeWorks report that the Alberta government commissioned a couple of years ago, but didn't release until after the election—presumably because they knew what we know, which is that the overwhelming majority of Albertans aren't interested in leaving the Canada pension plan, and for good reason. Apparently they understand something that Danielle Smith does not.
They hired LifeWorks. We know LifeWorks by another name. They reinvented themselves. It used to be Morneau Shepell. In other words, Danielle Smith hired some random Liberal to run the numbers for her. It's odd to see Conservatives, who usually really get in a tizzy any time you quote a Liberal source, unless it happens to agree with the position they have already taken.... It would be very interesting to go back and see all of the things that Conservatives have had to say about Morneau Shepell, particularly those who would seek to defend Danielle Smith.
Mr. Jasraj Singh Hallan: I have a point of order, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Daniel Blaikie: Don't kid yourself, Mr. Chair. What's going on in here....
The Chair: [Inaudible—Editor]
:
Sure, but I'm talking about the report that Danielle Smith commissioned about the CPP. I'm right on topic. I would love it if any Canadian listening today would lay out Mr. Kurek's remarks at committee beside mine, and see who's more relevant to the topic at hand.
I thank Mr. Hallan for his intervention, but I hope he will take my reassurances to heart that I am, indeed, very relevant.
It was an interesting point for him to intervene, because he helped make my point. My point is that Canadians here shouldn't kid themselves about what's going on with the Conservative Party at this table. It's nothing but a defence of Danielle Smith. They have said that they apparently—the federal Conservatives—support Alberta's staying in the plan. They say the only thing they find objectionable in the motion is the mention of Danielle Smith. So what's going on here?
Well, if it's not on the substance of the issue, then it must be the politics of the issue. They've identified that for us by saying that they would gladly pass this motion if it didn't mention Danielle Smith. So what's happening here is a defence of Danielle Smith—and perhaps they're taking their cues from Preston Manning, who in a recent email encouraged the federal Conservatives to have a closer practical relationship. A news article says that Manning “encouraged a 'closer practical relationship' between Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservatives and the federal Conservatives to promote shared interest, adding 'Everybody benefits, especially Alberta.'”
Now, surprise, surprise, the email was sent out by one of the pillars of the Canadian Conservative movement—I think it's fair to call Preston Manning that. What we see here are Conservatives saying that they agree with the substance of the issue, but they just don't think anyone should be allowed to criticize Danielle Smith; and they're going to tie up the whole finance committee, which is studying the housing crisis. They're going to put an end to that study effectively in order to run political defence for Danielle Smith.
I think that is pretty interesting. As I was saying, Danielle Smith hired a former Liberal finance minister's company, Morneau Shepell, to run the numbers for her. They came up with quite an impressive number, which is testament to what consultants are prepared to do for the right fee. We know a lot about that in Ottawa. The Liberals love to hire consultants. This was a Conservative government hiring a Liberal consultant to get a number they wanted that says Alberta would be entitled to over 50% of what's currently in the Canada pension plan.
There are lots of other people, who aren't random Liberals, who have said that Alberta's entitlement would be a lot less. We'll leave it to the Conservatives to decide whether they want to take the advice of a paid random Liberal, or the advice of the CPPIB, for instance, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, or some of the other economists who have come and said that, in fact, Alberta wouldn't be entitled to 55% or 60% of what's in the Canada pension plan fund, but would probably be entitled to somewhere between 12% and 18%, which is a considerable difference. It's considerable in terms of percentages, but when you think that we're dealing in hundreds of billions of dollars, the absolute difference becomes quite impressive indeed.
As I say, they hired a random Liberal, got a number that they wanted. It's reminiscent of the Brexit campaign. You may recall Boris Johnson, a Conservative, came up with the number of £350 million a day, he said, that could be reinvested in the National Health Service in Britain. People in the U.K. would get the best health service ever. Now doesn't that start to sound like somebody else? Donald Trump. I'll come back to him in a minute.
Just vote for Brexit and get the best health care ever, with £350 million pounds a day. Well, people in the U.K. did. It would be interesting to ask them how they feel about their health care.
I read an article recently that says that U.K. health care is really not much better at all since Brexit, but even we as Canadian parliamentarians have spent a lot of time talking about the consequences of Brexit. It's had a terrible economic impact on the United Kingdom, and it's had a terrible political impact, if we think about the conflict between Ireland and Northern Ireland and what it has done on the border and the potential for violence that has started up again. All of that was predicated in part on a lie—a lie about what it would mean for the United Kingdom's economic performance if they did what the Conservatives there encouraged them to do, a lie about what it would mean for their health care if they were to go in that direction.
The other thing that the National Health Service and Brexit debate have in common with the CPP is that the decision is irrevocable. There is no path back for the United Kingdom into the European Union, just as there will be no path back into the Canada pension plan for Alberta if this decision is made. I find it very reassuring to know that the majority of Albertans aren't interested in that, because it would do damage not only to Alberta workers but to workers across the country—except in Quebec, of course—because it would have a significant impact on their pensions.
Why is this plan dangerous? Well, it's dangerous because of the impact that it would have, but Alberta doesn't have to decide to leave the Canada pension plan in order for it to be dangerous now. What's being talked about is a potential referendum in 2025, and people say, “Okay, well, that's a ways away.” Even if Alberta did decide to leave, it would be another two or three years before they were out of the plan, so now we're into 2027 and 2028. “Well, maybe this isn't such a bad thing and we should let the process roll out,” they say, hence Conservative voices here saying: “Don't criticize Danielle Smith. Let her go out to consult.”
Folks who have talked to the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, which knows a bit about investing, would know that when you're managing a $580-billion portfolio that also includes a lot of hard assets, investment decisions have to be made years in advance in order to have enough liquidity to pay out someone who's demanding 12%, 18% or 50% of your holdings. You need to start arranging your investments in such a way as to be able to pay that out. Those investment decisions are not four or five years away. Those investment decisions are coming soon.
That's why what Danielle Smith is doing in Alberta is not innocent, and it's not harmless. It is dangerous, and it's dangerous now, because for the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board to take the Government of Alberta seriously, it means it has to start lining up its investment decisions now. This organization, which has been successful in delivering a 10% return over the last 10 years for Canadians through very difficult economic times, has to contemplate changing its investment behaviour in the near future in order to have enough liquid assets to pay out Alberta if Alberta decides to leave, and if that happens on a 2027, 2028 or 2029 timeline. It's coming.
It's coming and they have to be ready for that, so it is a dangerous plan. As I said, I think it's predicated on some bad numbers by some random Liberal, but it's also important to note the idea that somehow Alberta is paying more into the CPP than it's getting out assumes that because people happen to be working in Alberta from other parts of the country—and, I would add, at Alberta's invitation—means that, yes, it was paid into in Alberta, but I don't think there's anything wrong with people retiring to their home province and collecting their pension there. Effectively, what Danielle Smith is saying is that she wants to control where people take their retirement, and that if they worked in Alberta, they should retire in Alberta, because that's the only way to have fairness.
I think people should have the financial freedom within Canada to retire wherever they like. If they did the work, they receive those payments made into the CPP. Alberta never received those payments. Those workers received those payments. Yes, from an Alberta employer, but an Alberta employer who recruited them, hired them and asked them to stay and to work for them in that province. It's up to Canadian workers to decide where they take their retirement and where that money goes in their retirement.
I would add also that there's a liability the provinces where they retire are assuming, which is their health care liability, among others. Those folks who have retired to their home provinces are living on a much lower income and paying their taxes with a lower income in their home province and need to access health care services there. To say it's unfair because when their employer paid what the worker earned on their labour into the Canada pension plan they were working in Alberta and now they've retired to New Brunswick.... To say that somehow that's unfair to Alberta I think is to misunderstand the nature of those contributions. Those are contributions for the worker. They're not contributions for any one province.
Alberta wouldn't have been able to generate that wealth without having people come to do the work to extract barrels of oil from the ground. They did that at Alberta's invitation and, more particularly, the invitation of employers within Alberta. That's not a bad thing. That's actually how we say we want it to work. Conservatives who promote agreements on internal labour mobility...that's all so people can work in one province and retire in another or work in different provinces at different times.
They're not just fans of international labour mobility within Canada; they've been fans of international labour mobility internationally. You wouldn't know it, to listen to them talking in the House of Commons today, but the trade agreements that they've supported consistently over the last 30 years have all included labour mobility chapters in order to make it easier for companies to take workers from outside of Canada and bring them here.
Now they say they're offended that there are going to be some South Korean workers coming to set up battery plants. I share their concern. I don't think that this public investment was made in order to create jobs for people outside of Canada. I do think that the government should have gotten some guarantees on that, but I also recognize that Canada currently—and I'm glad that it will in the future—doesn't have expertise in battery manufacturing.
What the Conservatives say when they defend international labour mobility clauses in trade agreements is that sometimes you need expertise that doesn't exist and that we shouldn't make it hard on businesses to secure the expertise they need to set up shop in Canada and have successful investments. Now, all of a sudden when that's happening, under the very clauses that they bragged they negotiated, it's a crime. It's a crime, and we're all supposed to be really upset about it. I think they need to get their house in order and decide what they're in favour of or not.
As a New Democrat, I say this with some great comfort because we've often been very critical of the labour mobility chapters in trade agreements. I think of the CPTPP, and the Canada-European Union Trade Agreement, CETA. If you go back and look at the record, what were we talking about? Among other things it was the international labour mobility provisions and how they're sometimes abused in order to import workers to keep wages in Canada artificially low. Yes, I'm quite familiar with this debate.
What they're doing in terms of calling those workers “replacement workers” so that they can get out of taking a position on anti-scab legislation I think is sad and pathetic. I think it does a disservice to the debate in the House of Commons and a disservice to Canadian workers who have their jobs taken while they're out on the picket line. Let's not pretend like somehow this is a new concern, that we don't know about how this works, where these workers are coming from or how they're getting into the country. We know they're coming because they're coming under the auspices of the very agreements that Conservatives like to brag they negotiated, so give me a break on that one.
All that is to say that Conservatives support labour mobility, but when it doesn't suit them, they're happy to turn around and complain about it. They're complaining about it right now in the context of these battery plants. I think there are some important concerns there that have to be addressed, but we're not going to get to the bottom of it if we're not honest about the mechanisms by which they're coming. Now, the Alberta government wants to say that even though it's supported labour mobility for workers to come and work in Alberta, when they decide to take their retirement back home close to their family, somehow there's some kind of financial inequity. That's not true if you look at it and realize that the money belongs to the workers and that they should be free to take their retirement incomes wherever they want. Governments should not dictate where people are allowed to take their retirements. If we believe in full mobility within Canada as a right of Canadian citizenship and the right of a Canadian worker, that therefore should not be used as an argument for fiscal inequity when we're talking about the Canada pension plan.
Is this motion divisive? No, I think it's reasonable to criticize the Danielle Smith government, for all of the reasons that I've just laid out. We need to be able to have a frank conversation about the one reliable pillar of Canadians' retirement incomes. It's okay to name names in that debate. Danielle Smith doesn't hesitate to mention the names of people she disagrees with. The Conservatives don't hesitate to mention the names of the people they disagree with. I've certainly heard Conservatives criticize Rachel Notley—if we want to talk about federal politicians criticizing provincial politicians. They certainly didn't hesitate from criticizing the Notley government. The idea that somehow it's automatically divisive or out of bounds for people to criticize folks in provincial politics is an argument that I might accept from my Bloc colleague, but I'm not going to accept it from the Conservatives, who have made a trade of attacking provincial governments that they disagree with.
I was interested in this question. I went back and thought it was quite interesting to see that , the now leader of the Conservative Party, in 2018 said—I believe it was at this very committee—“Madam Chair, the finance minister is now commenting on the provincial policies in the various jurisdictions. That is just fine. In Ontario....” Then he went on to attack the Wynne government.
We've heard directly from the Conservative leader that he thinks it's totally fair game. We've not only heard him saying that it was fine for Bill Morneau at the time, who incidentally went on to write that—well, he's the owner of the company that wrote the report for the Alberta government, but never mind—he's done it himself. He's done it many times. On October 30 of this year my colleague got up in the House of Commons to ask him a question about social and co-op housing, and he got up and talked about what the B.C. NDP were doing and he described social housing is a “Soviet-style takeover of housing.” Well, you can think what you want about the comment. I personally think it's patently absurd.
That was just a totally ridiculous comment, but he made it, and that was a criticism of a provincial government. But now they're saying, “Oh, wow, we can't name a provincial government. That would be really divisive.” To call the B.C. government a Soviet government isn't using language that I would characterize as designed to encourage national unity, Mr. Chair, so let's just take a pause on that and reflect on that.
Let's also reflect on the fact that the Conservative leader has hardly any meaningful policies to address the housing crisis. The one thing he hangs his hat on is going after municipal politicians outside of federal jurisdiction—municipal jurisdiction is not federal jurisdiction—and he's been making a career of going around the country attacking municipal jurisdictions and attacking municipal politicians. That's not a great move from a national unity point of view, and it's clearly not a move that says we can't talk about what other levels of government are doing here. Kind of his whole thing on housing is talking about other levels of government so he doesn't have to talk about the absence of federal housing policy in his own bill—
An hon. member: Should I donate to your campaign?
Mr. Daniel Blaikie: —which is really about giving land away to developers in a similar fashion we saw take place in Ontario.
Now we have an amendment to this motion because the Conservatives, more than anything, want to take out reference to Danielle Smith, because they're taking their cues from Preston Manning. The amendment is to take out reference to Alberta's plan to leave and to replace it with a bunch of stuff about energy policy so that they have something they'd prefer to talk about.
That's consistent with a strategy we've seen now for a while, which is that the Conservatives don't want to talk about any of the things that are politically inconvenient for them. We saw that right when we came back to the House, the made some serious allegations. We've seen now that the U.S. is similarly concerned about an assassination attempt by a Sikh nationalist on its own soil. We saw the Prime Minister make what was a very serious accusation at that time, and we had a debate about it for an entire evening in the House of Commons, and in the course of that debate we saw one Conservative speaker speak for five minutes and they took a pass on the rest of the debate because we know Stephen Harper—
We are resuming meeting number 121 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance. Pursuant to the order of reference of Thursday, November 23, 2023, the committee is commencing its study of Bill an act to amend the Excise Tax Act and the Competition Act.
As indicated in the memo that was sent out last week, I'd like to remind members that amendments to the bill must be submitted to the clerk of the committee by noon tomorrow, Tuesday, November 28. It is important for members to note that, pursuant to the order adopted by the House on Thursday, November 23, the noon deadline is firm. This means any amendments submitted to the clerk after the deadline and any amendments moved from the floor during the clause-by-clause consideration of the bill will not be considered by the committee. It is important that, when submitting amendments, members also send an XML version of the amendment file. This will ensure that the legislative clerks are able to quickly put together the package of amendments, which will be a benefit to all members of the committee.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the Standing Order 15.1. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
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As a reminder, all comments should be addressed through the chair. For members in the room, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can. We appreciate your patience and understanding in this regard.
I'd now like to welcome our witnesses. With us today is the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, the Honourable Chrystia Freeland. Welcome, Minister. I see that you're wearing your Ukraine pin colours. Thank you for commemorating the Holodomor this weekend with the community.
Joining you today, from the Department of Finance, is the assistant deputy minister of the tax policy branch, Miodrag Jovanovic.
The floor is yours, Minister, for opening remarks.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I am wearing the Ukrainian colours because this weekend was the 90th anniversary of the Holodomor. There were many residents of your constituency there, and our colleague was there as well on this solemn occasion. I thought it was definitely worth standing in solidarity with Ukraine today.
[Translation]
I am delighted to be here with you and the committee members to discuss Bill . This legislation is part of our government's economic plan to build an economy that is focused on the well-being of all Canadians, to create good jobs people can count on.
Our plan is working. In the first half of this year, Canada ranked third highest in the world for foreign direct investment and had more per capita investment than any other G7 country—better than the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, France and Japan. Canada has the lowest deficit and the lowest debt‑to‑GDP ratio in the G7. The International Monetary Fund projects that Canada will see the strongest economic growth in the G7 next year.
All of that means that our economy is creating excellent jobs for Canadians right across the country. In fact, there are over a million more people working today than there were prepandemic. Building on that significant progress, our government is taking new concrete measures, under the affordable housing and groceries bill, to address two of the biggest challenges facing Canadians, access to housing and affordability.
[English]
I'd like to outline why it is so important that we work together to pass this legislation.
First, we are removing the GST on new purpose-built rental housing, which we all know will help build more homes faster across Canada. This is about making the math work for builders and giving them an incentive to build more homes that would otherwise not move forward due to construction costs. For example, in the case of a two-bedroom rental unit valued at $500,000, a builder will benefit from $25,000 in tax relief. That makes it more cost-effective for them to build. It's going to build more rental homes faster. We know Canadians need that.
Our plan is already delivering results. To give you one example, a Toronto-based developer said, after we announced this measure, that this developer will now build 5,000 new rental units across the country. These are units that were otherwise on hold. Provinces, including Ontario, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador, have followed our lead by eliminating provincial taxes on new rentals, and that is getting even more new rental housing built across Canada.
In the fall economic statement that I tabled last week, the federal government is also proposing to eliminate the GST on the construction of new co-op, purpose-built rental housing, something that members of this committee have been advocating for and that we've been having very good constructive conversations about.
Today, about a third of all Canadians rent their homes, and whether they are students, families, seniors or new Canadians, it's essential that we build more rental homes and build them faster. I really believe that is a goal that all members of this committee share, and by passing the affordable housing and groceries act, we can help to do just that.
Bill would also increase competition across our economy, particularly in the grocery sector. More competition means lower prices and more choice. By increasing competition and cracking down on unfair and anti-competitive practices, we're helping to stabilize prices for Canadians. That includes by amending the Competition Act to give more power to the Competition Bureau to help the bureau investigate and crack down on price-fixing.
We are also removing the efficiencies defence to end anti-competitive mergers that raise prices and limit choices for Canadians. We are empowering the Competition Bureau to put a stop to situations where large grocers prevent smaller competitors from establishing operations nearby.
Through our economic plan, our government will continue to do everything we can to build an economy that works for everyone, and that is exactly what this legislation will help to do.
Thank you. I'm happy to take your questions.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I think it's my first time at your esteemed committee. I feel privileged to be here today.
[Translation]
Good afternoon everyone.
It is a pleasure to be able to speak today to the Competition Act amendments contained in Bill , the affordable housing and groceries act.
[English]
Competition drives innovation. I think every member would agree. It lowers prices and encourages better product quality and choice. That's what we want for Canadians.
Our competition framework needs to be updated to keep up with today's reality. This is why we've introduced Bill , which includes some of the most significant reforms to the Competition Act since 1986, some 37 years ago.
As I said, over the past decades, markets have greatly changed due to digitization and globalization. We have seen corporate consolidation and an imbalanced distribution of economic power in our country.
[Translation]
Delivering on the government’s commitment to undertake a formal review of the law and its enforcement regime, I launched the consultation on the future of competition policy in Canada, in November 2022.
[English]
The consultations were extensive and very comprehensive. They lasted 120 days, with five round tables across Canada. We received more than 400 submissions from Canadians and stakeholder organizations.
[Translation]
Bill contains important amendments that give the Competition Bureau increased powers. We focused on prioritizing these changes because we knew they would have a real and significant impact on Canada’s retail grocery sector, which needs greater competition and, certainly, more choice for consumers.
[English]
It's very simple, colleagues. The bill makes three key amendments. The first one is to allow the bureau to seek subpoenas to compel information when conducting market studies. Second, we will repeal the so-called efficiencies defence, which currently allows harmful mergers to proceed, even if they don't benefit Canadians. Third, we'll expand the scope of reviewable agreements that could harm competition, such as restrictive covenants you find in leases when you have a large grocery store that collaborates with the landlord to block a small grocery store from coming in nearby.
Let me talk a bit about market studies.
[Translation]
The purpose of market studies conducted by the Competition Bureau is to better understand competitive dynamics and make recommendations to government. Currently, the bureau cannot compel companies to provide information outside a law enforcement investigation. As a result, the studies it releases may be missing important information.
This deficiency was made clear by the bureau’s recent retail grocery market study. The bureau did not benefit from the full co-operation of the major grocery chains for its study, and the Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food recently recommended that this gap be remedied.
A large number of submissions to the public consultation were also in favour of granting formal information-gathering powers for market studies.
[English]
However, many stakeholders insisted that any framework that would be put in place should also provide safeguards to avoid fishing expeditions and undue burdens on companies. Our proposed framework takes these concerns into account, and it balances the need for the collection of vital information with reasonable safeguards to protect businesses.
On the so-called efficiencies defence, as you would recall, Mr. Chair, that's quite a unique and highly criticized feature of our competition law regime. It currently protects a merger that harms competition so long as generated corporate efficiencies offset the harm to competition.
Think about that for a moment. Why should we allow mergers that demonstrably harm competition in this country? That's the question we need to ask ourselves.
[Translation]
In our consultation, we heard that this exception was possibly the single-largest weakness in a law that had failed to rein in corporate concentration, including in the grocery sector.
[English]
The elimination of the efficiencies defence will give priority to the protection of competition in merger review. I would say to my esteemed colleagues that it is time for corporate mergers that don't benefit Canadians to be consigned to the history books.
Next is vertical collaboration.
[Translation]
However, agreements between non-competing entities, such as landlord and tenant, also known as vertical agreements, are outside the scope of the bureau’s review of potentially anticompetitive agreements.
[English]
An example of the kind of agreement that we want to stop is the use of what we call “land controls”, such as restrictive covenants that can prevent new grocery stores from setting up shop across our country. This hurts competition and can even lead to food deserts, when the original tenant leaves a particular location. This is, simply put, unacceptable, and I hope every member of this committee thinks so too. We will ensure that these agreements, whose very purpose is to restrict competition, will be reviewable.
In conclusion, the bill will benefit Canadians with an empowered Competition Bureau, enable greater competition, bring more transparency to markets, block harmful mergers and ensure the bureau can review all forms of anti-competitive agreements. I think what we want, and what every Canadian wants, is less consolidation, more competition and better prices for Canadians.
With that, Mr. Chair, I will be more than happy to take questions from my esteemed colleagues.
:
Thank you for your question and your introductory comments in French, Mr. Weiler. I will answer first in French and then in English.
The last serious attempt to reform the Competition Act was in 1986. That was nearly four decades ago, so I think a major reform of the law is long overdue.
We took the first step in that direction in February 2022, through the budget.
[English]
We then introduced in November this very broad consultation.
I must say to colleagues who are part of this committee that we should take pride in this being a government and a Parliament that listens to people. We conducted a market study or, let's say, consultation for almost two years looking at the different aspects. People would agree, particularly in the grocery sector.... That's why you see that these three key amendments are really focused. It's because it's a complex industry and an unregulated industry, but one, I would say, that affects Canadians in their daily lives. We have seen what types of things would make the most sense.
To me, it is shocking to think that, in 2023, in a G7 country, the competition authority would not have subpoena powers when it does market studies. Members of this committee should all be cheering when we receive royal assent, because it's pretty unique, if you think about it, that you would have a body there to look at competition that does not have subpoena powers. We are probably one of the very few countries in the world that I can think of that has an authority that cannot seek information or documents.
We've seen how this could be harmful, because in the last study that was done on the food sector, as I said in my opening remarks, we saw various degrees of co-operation with this entity. Think about that. This entity is there to inform Canadians, government and Parliament, so for it not to be able to have a full understanding of the market is pretty concerning to me.
Even that is going to help a lot, because in this industry or others.... Think about it. There are so many other industries for which we may want to do market studies to better understand what the competitive dynamic is, why we are where we are, why the prices are what they are and what the issues around competition are.
I'll give you a small example. One of the things I'm trying to do is bring another grocer into the country to disrupt the market. It's what they call a deep discounter. That's the term they use in the industry. When I talked to the U.S. grocers, one of the reasons they didn't come to Canada—believe it or not, it's not the market—was the restrictive covenant in leases. They said, “Minister, we looked at Canada but, believe it or not, even as big as we are, it was extremely difficult to find a place we could lease because of all these restrictive covenants in leases.” I got that from some of the big grocers in the U.S.
I said, “Wow. Imagine that.” If Canadians knew that.... Now potentially—I'm not saying it's a done deal—you have grocers that may want to come to Canada, and one of the problems they have is leasing premises because of what are called land control provisions basically preventing them from being able to rent premises so that they can offer an alternative to consumers.
These kinds of measures are really down-to-earth and are going to help Canadians, and they'll certainly bring more competition to our country.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the finance committee for inviting me to discuss what I believe is one of the most important public policy problems facing Canada today.
First are my disclosures. I don't belong to or donate money to any political party or allow lawn signs during federal, provincial or municipal elections.
Second, I am a tenured professor paid by Carleton, not by business or NGOs or unions. I don't consult. I'm not a lobbyist.
Third, immediately after the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1980 until 2020 with the onset of the pandemic, I taught over 100 times in former centrally planned economies across central-east Europe, Cuba, Iran and China. There were none or only a few private, for-profit corporations and very little competition, only state-owned monopolies, which led to the very low income per capita that characterizes countries that do not have a decentralized market economy with private competitive firms.
It must be stated at the outset that competition policy is a critical part of the policy infrastructure of a national government.
As an NFL junkie since the first Super Bowl in 1967, I deeply understand the need for referees in a football or hockey game, because players cheat. They hook, they spear, they trip, they hold and they grab face masks, and referees must penalize the cheaters. However, the purpose and actions of the referees must never attempt to displace the decision-makers, the coaches or the QB or the CEO, such that they'll start to decide when Patrick Mahomes should throw the ball or Sidney Crosby should shoot the puck.
Referees and competition policy are a means to an end. They are not the end goal or purpose of national public policy. We should not embrace competition policy as an intrinsic end. It is simply a tool to possibly enhance competition.
Why bother? It's because Adam Smith and 250 years of economic theory and practice have taught us that competition between competing firms drives down prices and increases choices. Even more importantly, as Joseph Schumpeter famously taught us, it is the only credible driver of productivity increases in the standard of living. It's the only way that a country can increase its standard of living over time.
Nowadays, the most widely accepted economic approach to competition, I think it's fair to say, is the one proposed by Schumpeter, who defined competition as a dynamic process wherein firms strive to survive under an evolving set of rules that constantly produces winners and losers. Restated, competition is the true regulator of economic activity, while competition policy is a poor, second-best but necessary substitute.
My fear with the proposed and excellent Competition Bureau report, “The Future of Competition Policy”, is the danger that decision-makers in Ottawa now view competition policy policing as the source of competitiveness.
My second fear concerns the belief by, I think, an increasing number of elected officials in Canada that big or large corporations are intrinsically uncompetitive or anti-competitive. This is simply contradicted by the superb research of Statistics Canada, John Baldwin and other researchers that demonstrates that many of our largest corporations achieve much higher rates of total factor productivity.
What must be done?
Unfortunately, few parliamentarians seem to recognize that which is on our nose and indeed created by parliamentarians—not just this Parliament but past Parliaments. Our national and provincial governments have created monopolies and oligopolies across the economy as a matter of public policy. The telecom act prohibits foreign telecom operators—I talk about this in class every week—so that we have exactly three telcos and some of the highest cellphone fees in the world.
We have maybe 2.5 airlines, as the act of Parliament prohibits entry by foreign airlines. Our Bank Act ensures that we have an oligopoly. I worked for nine years in a bank and I have great respect for the banks. However, we have an oligopoly of five or six banks, with a concentration ratio of over 90%. Our supply management laws mostly prohibit foreign dairy entry.
So that I don't just pick on the federal level, the Beer Store in Canada's largest province mostly prohibits competition in corner stores and grocery stores, where it belongs—as does the LCBO.
When we do not create outright monopolies and oligopolies, we create some of the highest regulatory standards in the world, such as in mining, which have driven out capital investment in our country. This has been analyzed empirically and recently by Bill Robson in his excellent article, “Working Harder for Less: More People but Less Capital is No Recipe for Prosperity”.
Our non-residential capital stock per worker is second-lowest in the OECD. Only New Zealand is worse.
Now, let's use plain English as I wrap up.
Capital stock is investment in businesses. We all know that. Investment creates competition. That drives up productivity and drives down prices, so what are we doing in Canada? We are stifling competition in multiple industries by creating oligopolies and monopolies. Pogo warned us, “We have met the enemy and he is us”.
Thank you.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
:
I am the executive director of CAMP, a Canadian think tank dedicated to addressing issues caused by monopoly power in Canada.
This is an exciting time for competition policy in Canada, and CAMP is glad to see parties across Parliament putting forward plans to strengthen Canada’s competition law and protect affordability for Canadians.
Bill is an important investment in the future of competition in Canada, and CAMP is happy to support it.
By removing the efficiencies defence, giving the commissioner of competition the power to conduct market studies and expanding the scope of enforcement against anti-competitive agreements, Bill makes material positive contributions to the Competition Act.
I'll be frank. I don't believe that these changes will make groceries more affordable tomorrow. The situation today is the result of decades of thinking, at the heart of the Competition Act, that has supported consolidation and reduced competition at the expense of Canadians. The work to reverse that thinking will take time. As I mentioned, we see these proposed changes as investments that will pay off for Canadians in the coming months, years and decades, and in sectors well beyond grocery.
That being said, within the current scope of Bill , we would like to propose two changes to strengthen the bill so that it might better serve Canadians.
First, the commissioner of competition should have the independent authority to conduct market studies without the direction of the minister. Bill provides appropriate checks and limits on the commissioner's use of the market study power and, as such, independent study authority should be granted to preserve the agency's independence.
Second, powers related to anti-competitive agreements should be further strengthened to ensure meaningful enforcement. This means adding the ability to pursue past agreements and penalties for those who engage in these agreements, the absence of which currently renders the provision ineffective.
With these changes, Bill will deliver more benefits to Canadians sooner, but looking beyond Bill , more comprehensive change is still needed to the Competition Act to ensure competitive markets for Canadians going forward. Even with the removal of the efficiencies defence, Canadians will not be fully protected from further consolidation in important markets. Future reform should introduce presumptions against mergers in already concentrated markets, banning them outright in highly concentrated ones. It should also set the standard for remedies to harmful mergers at preserving or improving competition, not making things worse at a more acceptable pace.
For markets already characterized by a small number of players, we need stronger provisions to ensure that any dominance isn’t abused at the expense of Canadian businesses, workers and consumers. Today, abuse of dominance cases are few and far between and can take years to investigate. Expanding the scope of the provision and streamlining its enforcement should be a key priority.
Finally, the enforcement of the Competition Act should be more transparent and decentralized. The Competition Bureau has made important strides in communicating how it works to Canadians, but it is still very much a black box and we fall short of the transparency of peer jurisdictions like the United Kingdom. Canada's competition law enforcement is also quite centralized, with the Competition Bureau responsible for all markets across our $2-trillion economy. By allowing private parties to seek damages under the Competition Act, Canada will have more eyes on the ground to identify and address unfair methods of competition going forward.
Today, with Bill , I think this committee has an opportunity to make a material improvement toward more robust competition law, but after Bill , the priority should be to finish that work with more comprehensive reform of the law that Canadians depend on to protect competition and affordability.
Thank you for your time today. I look forward to your questions.
:
Thank you so much for the invitation.
[Translation]
My name is Marie-Josée Houle and as the first federal housing advocate, my role is to carry out concrete actions at the national level to ensure that legislation, policies and programs respect the human right to adequate housing.
The housing crisis has reached catastrophic proportions.
[English]
I am here as a human rights accountability mechanism for people in crisis. Canada enshrined the right to housing in the 2019 National Housing Strategy Act. The need for Canada to uphold its human rights obligations must be prioritized in this discussion.
The key reason for the housing crisis is that government housing policy has focused on incentives for the private sector, and we know from the past 30 years that the private sector does not create affordable housing. The activities that this committee is looking at, such as shareholder profits and passive income streams, are about treating housing as a financial commodity and an asset for profit—but not as a human right.
This is called financialization. It is a widespread practice that has negatively shaped our housing system at the expense of affordable and accessible housing supply. Our research on financialization estimates that 20% to 30% of Canada's rental housing supply is financialized. It demonstrates clearly the harm that it is causing to people in Canada.
We need to adopt a human rights approach that puts people first. Governments must invest in our housing system and use public funds for public good. The best way forward is investing in non-market housing. Non-market housing benefits society. It creates permanently affordable, accessible housing to meet the needs of a wide range of people. Disadvantaged groups that are spending a disproportionate amount of their income on housing will have more money for food, medicine, child care and other needs.
Investing in non-market housing also has an economic value and is the best use of taxpayers' dollars. It benefits everyone because it is not inflationary. When people are not paying so much for their housing, they're able to spend in other areas, so it will bolster the economic stability of other sectors. Investing in non-market housing will mean a more equitable and healthy housing system and allow governments to focus on other pressing portfolios.
Bridging the gap in Canada's affordable supply will require a long-term plan. Research we commissioned from housing expert Carolyn Whitzman estimates that Canada is currently short 4.4 million affordable homes for those in need. She uses a human rights-based approach to count people who are usually left out of supply estimates and focuses on renters. Meanwhile, CMHC's 2022 report on housing supply shortages based its estimate on housing demand, including demand from investors, and only looked at home ownership.
[Translation]
This is a complex problem that calls for multiple solutions.
I am happy to see that the fall economic statement emphasized non-market housing. I am thinking, for example, of the elimination of the GST for new housing cooperative construction projects.
[English]
More needs to be done. The national housing strategy's $82-billion suite of programs must change course to prioritize non-market housing. The federal government can create an acquisition fund for non-market and indigenous housing providers to buy, repair and operate existing buildings. The federal government must attach conditions to federal infrastructure projects and funding that mandate the creation of non-market housing in these new projects.
Other measures include pushing for strong rent stabilization measures across Canada, amending federal policies related to pension fund investments and taxation of real estate investment trusts, better data collection on financialization and better accountability when taxpayer funds are spent on incentives to the private sector.
All levels of government have a role to play. The federal government has a responsibility to lead the way.
Thank you so much. I look forward to your questions.
:
Good evening, Mr. Chair and members of the committee. Thank you for the invitation to appear before you this evening.
My name is Matthew Boswell. As you've heard, I am the commissioner of competition for Canada. Joining me is my amazing colleague Anthony Durocher, the deputy commissioner responsible for competition promotion.
[Translation]
The Competition Bureau is an independent law enforcement agency that protects and promotes competition for the benefit of Canadian consumers and businesses. We do this because competition drives lower prices and innovation while fueling economic growth.
[English]
We administer and enforce the Competition Act by investigating and taking action to address anti-competitive business practices that harm consumers, competition and our economy. These include price-fixing, deceptive marketing and abuse of market power. We also review mergers to ensure they do not substantially harm competition. Finally, we advocate for pro-competitive government policies and regulations. We believe that our experience as Canada's only competition law enforcement agency affords us an important voice in identifying the limits and issues surrounding the act's application on a day-to-day basis.
In March of this year, we made a public submission to the government's consultation on the future of competition policy in Canada. We identified a number of areas where the bureau believes reform is required, informed by our experience in administering and enforcing the act. In fact, we made over 50 recommendations to the government for its consideration. We are pleased that some of our suggestions could be implemented through Bill .
[Translation]
These suggestions include:
First, there is the updating of our market study powers, including the ability to compel information when warranted. That would permit us to better investigate certain industries as necessary.
Second, there is the repealing of the efficiencies defence, which will strengthen the Bureau’s position to challenge anti-competitive mergers for the benefit of all Canadians.
[English]
On introducing a vertical collaboration provision, while such a change was not part of our recommendation package to the government's consultation, the bureau welcomes this addition to tackle potentially anti-competitive conduct.
Further, we were encouraged by Parliament's decision to potentially expand the scope of Bill to allow this committee to make additional amendments to the act, most notably to increase the penalty amounts for the abuse of dominance provision, to give the commissioner of competition the ability to initiate market study inquiries, and to revise the legal test for abuse of dominance prohibition orders.
We believe these amendments mark a key step in modernizing Canada's competition law and ensuring the bureau can better protect and promote competition in Canada. A more competitive economy will benefit all Canadians by offering more choice and greater affordability for consumers and businesses.
[Translation]
If these proposed amendments become law, the Bureau will take care to ensure that its approach going forward with respect to their application is communicated clearly and transparently to businesses and stakeholders alike. We are keenly aware of the importance of predictability in this realm.
We look forward to discussing these proposed amendments today with you.
[English]
Thank you. We look forward to your questions.
:
Good evening. Thank you again for the invitation to appear this evening.
My name is Tim Ross. I'm the executive director of the Co-operative Housing Federation of Canada. CHF Canada is the national voice of housing co-operatives from coast to coast to coast.
In a world of growing housing insecurity, unbearable rent increases and social isolation, housing co-operatives offer solutions to these economic and social challenges. Co-operative housing is a well-documented success story. For over 50 years, co-ops have been providing good-quality and affordable housing owned and managed by their members. There are more than 2,200 housing co-operatives located in every province and territory. They are home to a quarter of a million Canadians.
Co-op housing operates at cost, meaning members' housing costs remain stable. They cover the costs of operating and maintaining vibrant communities.
Research from last year proves that co-op homes cost $400 to $500 less per month than comparable private rental buildings in similar cities. Think of what an extra $400 or $500 a month could mean to your household. It could mean more nutritious meals. It could mean supporting extracurriculars for kids. It could mean saving for education, saving for a house or saving for retirement. The value of co-ops is well known to their members, but we want to do more to build more co-operative housing.
Another benefit of co-operative housing is that co-ops offer security of tenure. There is no outside landlord who might sell or renovict the property, or jack the rents just because the markets can bear it. Finally, co-ops are very strong communities. The members who live there care about their community, and they care about their neighbours.
The value of co-op housing has been recognized by governments of all political stripes throughout Canada’s history, most recently in the legislation that is the purpose of this study by the committee and in the fall economic statement.
I wanted to offer that context before I spoke a bit about our reaction to Bill .
Bill includes the new GST rental rebate, which has been designed to incentivize the construction of purpose-built rental housing. While we know that increasing the supply of multi-unit rental housing is important, we need to make sure that we are building the right kind of supply—the type of housing that people can actually access and afford. Co-ops certainly fit the bill.
The fall economic statement proposes including co-operative housing in this rebate. We appreciate this policy change, as we know it will be directly passed on to future members living in future co-op homes built across the country.
Reduced project costs will translate to lower project debts, resulting in lower housing charges for the members from the outset. Through the co-op housing model that operates on a not-for-profit basis, these savings will be passed on directly to the households occupying these new co-op homes from day one, and this benefit will increase over time.
I would also be remiss if I didn't speak about this rebate in the context of the co-operative housing development program. We are quite excited to see the co-operative housing sector growing in Canada. The federal budget in 2022 included the first federal investment in co-op housing in over 30 years, as well as a commitment to codesign the program with the co-operative housing sector.
CHF Canada encourages the federal government to launch the co-op housing development program as soon as possible, as there is a lost opportunity cost in waiting for a program to launch as costs continue to rise.
Our excitement for this program is tempered by the fact that we know more is needed to solve the housing crisis. Ms. Marie-Josée Houle gave some of these numbers as well. The key to solving the crisis is not just building more homes; it’s building more community homes, meaning more co-op and non-profit housing.
You would ask, perhaps, “At what cost?” I know we're all mindful of the fiscal situation and its potential impact on inflation. It's very important that we tame inflation.
I want to highlight a study that was just published today by the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association. It was written by Deloitte. It demonstrates the benefit to Canada's economy if we continue to grow the community housing sector in Canada just up to the OECD average. By doing so, by 2030, we would increase economic productivity in Canada by 5.7% to 9.3%. It would lift our GDP by up to $136 billion. What's very important is that this study further demonstrated that government investment in the creation of new community housing was non-inflationary.
Thank you very much for the opportunity to share some of these updates from the co-operative housing sector. I look forward to your questions.
:
Hello, Mr. Chair and committee members. We thank you for offering us the opportunity to present our comments today.
My name is Sara Eve Levac and I am a lawyer with Option consommateurs. I am joined by my colleague Carlos Castiblanco, who is an economist and analyst.
Option consommateurs was created in 1983 and is a not-for-profit association whose mission is to help consumers and defend their rights. Option consommateurs has been involved in issues relating to competition for decades. It often answers consumers' questions concerning deceptive marketing practices. It has initiated class actions alleging violations of the Competition Act. It also contributed to the recent consultation on the future of competition policy in Canada.
We are therefore in a good position to provide our comments on Bill .
Option consommateurs supports Bill and urges that it be enacted. First, in this inflationary period, it proposes better oversight of market competition. We also welcome the repeal of the efficiencies defence in corporate merger cases. Second, it is part of a comprehensive and multi-faceted approach for stimulating the housing supply.
However, we propose that the measures put forward in the bill be strengthened. Our presentation will focus on two of these suggestions.
First, the amendments to the Competition Act should give the Competition Bureau the necessary leeway in carrying out market studies.
Second, there should be more focus on creating affordable housing. This would mean specifying the criteria for housing units that are eligible for the excise tax rebate, for one thing.
I would note that we have produced a written brief setting out our position on the bill in detail.
First, Bill gives the Competition Bureau a mandate to conduct inquiries into the state of competition in a market, at the request of the minister. We propose that the Competition Bureau have powers that enable it to obtain the necessary information directly in conducting such inquiries.
For example, the Competition Bureau recently did a market study on the retail grocery sector. In that study, it pointed out that the companies had not all cooperated to the same degree.
To ensure that the market studies provided for in Bill are effective, the Competition Bureau should have the power to compel a person to provide information to it.
At present, Bill provides that the Bureau must apply to a court for an order that a person provide information to the Bureau. This additional step cause additional delays in the conduct of inquiries.
We note that elsewhere in the world, including in the United States and the European Union, the institutions responsible for overseeing the state of competition do have that power.
As well, the power of the Competition Board to undertake a market study should be included in the act. Elsewhere in the world and in Canada, the power of other oversight institutions to undertake studies is expressly provided in the law.
I will give my colleague Mr. Castiblanco the floor to talk to you about our comments on the proposed amendments to the Excise Tax Act.
:
We are resuming meeting number 121 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance.
Pursuant to the order of reference of Thursday, November 23, 2023, the committee is resuming its study of Bill , an act to amend the Excise Tax Act and the Competition Act.
I'd like to provide members of the committee with a few comments on how the committee will proceed with the clause-by-clause consideration of Bill .
As the name indicates, this is an examination of all the clauses in the order in which they appear in the bill. I will call each clause successively, and each clause is subject to debate and a vote.
If there is an amendment to the clause in question, I will recognize the member proposing it, who may explain it.
I'd like to remind committee members that pursuant to the order adopted by the House on Thursday, November 23, all amendments had to be submitted to the clerk of the committee by noon yesterday.
As a result, the chair will allow only amendments submitted before that deadline to be moved and debated. In other words, only amendments contained in the distribution package of amendments will be considered.
When no further members wish to intervene, the amendment will be voted on. Amendments will be considered in the order in which they appear in the package each member received from the clerk.
In addition to having to be properly drafted in a legal sense, amendments must also be procedurally admissible. The chair may be called upon to rule amendments inadmissible if they go against the principle of the bill or beyond the scope of the bill—both of which were adopted by the House when it agreed to government business motion 30 and the bill at second reading—or if they offend the financial prerogative of the Crown.
Amendments have been given a number in brackets in the top right corner to indicate which party submitted them. There is no need for a seconder to move an amendment. Once it has been moved, you will need unanimous consent to withdraw it.
During debate on an amendment, members are permitted to move subamendments. Subamendments must be provided in writing. Those subamendments do not require the approval of the mover of the amendment. Only one subamendment may be considered at a time, and that subamendment cannot be amended.
When a subamendment is moved to an amendment, it is voted on first. Then, another subamendment may be moved, or the committee may consider the main amendment and vote on it.
Finally, pursuant to the order adopted by the House, if the committee has not completed the clause-by-clause consideration of the bill by 11:59 p.m., all remaining amendments submitted to the committee shall be deemed moved, the chair shall put the question forthwith and successively without further debate on all remaining clauses and amendments submitted to the committee, as well as each and every question necessary to dispose of the clause-by-clause consideration of the bill, and the committee shall not adjourn the meeting until it has disposed of the bill.
I thank members for their attention and wish everyone a productive clause-by-clause consideration of Bill .
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format pursuant to Standing Order 15.1. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
I'd like to make a few comments for the benefit of the witnesses and members.
Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. For those participating by video conference, click on the microphone icon to activate your microphone, and please mute yourself when you are not speaking.
Regarding interpretation for those on Zoom, you have the choice at the bottom of your screen of floor, English or French audio.
For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel.
Although this room is equipped with a powerful audio system, feedback events can occur. These can be extremely harmful to interpreters and cause serious injuries. The most common cause of sound feedback is an earpiece worn too close to the microphone. We therefore ask all participants to exercise a high degree of caution when handling the earpieces, especially when your microphone or your neighbour's microphone is turned on. In order to prevent incidents and safeguard the hearing health of the interpreters, I invite participants to ensure that they speak into the microphone into which their headset is plugged and avoid manipulating the earbuds by placing them on the table away from the microphone when they are not in use.
I will remind you that all comments should be addressed through the chair.
For members in the room, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can, and we appreciate your patience and understanding in this regard.
In accordance with the committee's routine motion concerning connection tests for witnesses, I've been informed that all witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
Members, just before we welcome our witnesses, you should have received the budgets that we need approved. Could I just get a thumbs-up?
(Motion agreed to)
The Chair: That's great. Those are approved.
Thanks to you and to the clerk.
Today, we are studying Bill , an act to amend the Excise Tax Act and the Competition Act.
With us today are our witnesses. From the Department of Finance, we have Robert Ives, who is an expert adviser on real property and financial institutions. From the Department of Industry, Mark Schaan is with us. He is the senior assistant deputy minister of the strategy and innovation policy sector. Also from the Department of Industry, we have Samir Chhabra, who has joined us. He is the director general of the marketplace framework policy branch. Finally, we have Martin Simard, who is the senior director in the strategy and innovation policy sector.
Those are all of the officials who are with us today.
I saw MP Ste-Marie.
I have a few comments to make concerning the conduct of the study we are doing of Bill . I don't know whether this is the right time to talk about it. If not, I will do it when I speak to the first amendment I am going to suggest.
I want to let you know that I will shortly be withdrawing two of the amendments that I submitted. I am not happy about withdrawing them, because they reflect needs that have been expressed by groups of experts in the field who are directly affected by Bill C‑56. However, as they stand, those amendments would have adverse effects that might outweigh the benefits they were supposed to provide.
I am talking about this because we have a serious problem. We had to submit our amendments at the same time as we were listening to the witnesses in committee. Why? Because, as a result of the super gag order, we did not have enough time to do our work properly in committee. This is very serious. The fact that the government has an agreement and everything will be passed does not mean that we should bypass the work that members do in committee. This kind of contempt for parliamentarians is rarely seen. We cannot do our work properly.
I will give you an example. On day 1, at the briefing on Bill C‑56, we asked the finance department officials to send us the projections they had concerning the GST rebate. What effects were expected? How many more buildings and units would be built? How many fewer condos would be built? What figures is the bill based on? The day before yesterday, I again asked the Minister for these figures, and she said yes and they would be sent to us.
Now we are shortly going to be starting the clause by clause study of the bill, but we are going to be voting blindly, in a fog, because we still do not have those figures. The Minister named an academic who she said had done a study that the officials seemed not even to have read. That is not a serious way of doing things; it is not disciplined. We are still waiting. Ordinarily, I would not be prepared to vote, because I have not received the finance department's answer, even though the Minister of Finance undertook to send us the information.
On this point, I want to reiterate that the finance department seems to regard members of Parliament with contempt. For the last two years, when in camera studies of the budget or the economic statement took place, there were no officials on site to answer our questions, despite our repeated requests. Journalists, however, get in‑person access to the officials. We are given only hard copy documents, while journalists have access to the same documents on USB keys. It is as if the media were more trustworthy than members of Parliament, the people's elected representatives. It reflects the finance department's perception of the House of Commons and its members. It is unacceptable.
This week, in addition, we received a notice of ways and means motion five minutes before the briefing started. I would reiterate that there was no summary. There was nothing. We received 529 pages of incomprehensible legislative and tax gibberish and we had only five minutes to read the whole thing before asking the officials our questions. That shows the contempt that the department has for Parliament. I have an assistant who does research and has worked in the party for 25 years, and he says he has never seen things done this way in 25 years. As well, during the presentation, the sound quality of the official's remarks was so bad that we did not understand half of what he said. I was the only member who asked questions. I asked two questions. The answers were clear, but we did not have the means to prepare.
Then they will be coming to us with Bill C‑60, the follow‑up legislation, and I warn you. There are two weeks and a bit left before the work of the House is adjourned for the winter break. Does the government seriously want to get through the entire process to enact this mammoth bill and still think we are going to be able to do our job well? Does it not care at all about our work? This is not acceptable.
Some of the amendments I will shortly be proposing and I will not be withdrawing may create inconsistencies in the act. They were drafted with the help of the Office of the Law Clerk, but it was done quickly. The message I am sending to the government is "tough": if my amendments are adopted and create inconsistencies, it will be up to you to introduce other legislation to solve the problems, because you do not respect the work we do here, and that is unacceptable.
I hope that for the next budget implementation bill acceptable time is allowed so we are able to do our work properly.
In Bill , for example, there should be the follow‑up to the reform of the Competition Act. This is the first time in 37 years that there has been such a reform. However, if we want it to be enacted by Christmas, we can expect that we will not even have time to study it. Ultimately, there will be a reform of the Competition Act, when there has not been one for 37 years and there have been 20 years of calls for reform, but we will not even be able to do our work on it properly. This is not a serious way of doing things and it is undisciplined.
I oppose gag orders. Obviously, my party will always be in opposition here. I do not like it when Parliament is gagged. The government, which is in charge of how the work is done, could at least allow enough time for us to be able to hear witnesses and experts in committee, to talk to officials, and be able to delve a little more deeply into things and do our work properly.
That has not been possible with Bill . That is why I am shortly going to withdraw two of my amendments and why some of my other amendments might create problems in the overall structure of the bill. However, we have no choice, because of the super gag order that limited us to a single day of study before going to the vote. That is unacceptable.
During the pandemic, it might have been excusable; that was a special situation. Now, however, we have had two years of the finance department not respecting members of Parliament by preventing us from doing our work properly, both in camera and in committee and the House. This has to change, please.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.