36th Parliament, 1st Session
EDITED HANSARD • NUMBER 2
CONTENTS
Tuesday, September 23, 1997
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | The Speaker |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | OATHS OF OFFICE
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Bill C-1. Introduction and first reading
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Right Hon. Jean Chrétien |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | The Speaker |
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Right Hon. Jean Chrétien |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | BOARD OF INTERNAL ECONOMY
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | STANDING ORDERS
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Hon. Don Boudria |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | COMMITTEES OF THE WHOLE
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Appointment of Chairman
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Right Hon. Jean Chrétien |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Appointment of Deputy Chairman
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Right Hon. Jean Chrétien |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Appointment of Assistant Deputy Chairman
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Right Hon. Jean Chrétien |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | SUPPLY
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Hon. Don Boudria |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Hon. Marcel Massé |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Address in Reply
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Ms. Sarmite Bulte |
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Mr. Claude Drouin |
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Mr. Preston Manning |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE
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![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Hon. Don Boudria |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Hon. Don Boudria |
![V](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/b_stone1.gif) | Motion
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(Official Version)
EDITED HANSARD • NUMBER 2
![](/web/20061116183332im_/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/common/images/crest2.gif)
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Tuesday, September 23, 1997
The House met at 2.30 p.m.
Prayers
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[English]
SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
A message was delivered by the Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod
as follows:
Mr. Speaker, His Excellency the Governor General desires the
immediate attendance of this honourable House in the Chamber of
the Senate.
Accordingly, Mr. Speaker with the House went up to the Senate
Chamber.
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[Translation]
And the House being returned to the Commons chamber:
The Speaker: Order, please. I have the honour to report that,
the House having attended on His Excellency the Governor General in
the Senate chamber, I informed His Excellency that the choice of
Speaker had fallen upon me. On your behalf, I made the usual claim
for your privileges which His Excellency was pleased to confirm to
you.
[English]
I wish to inform the House that in accordance with the
presentation made by the government, pursuant to Standing Order
55(1), I have caused to be published a special Order Paper giving
notice of two government motions. I now lay upon the table the
relevant documents.
* * *
OATHS OF OFFICE
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.) moved for
leave to introduce Bill C-1 respecting the administration of
oaths of office.
(Motions deemed adopted and bill read the first time)
* * *
SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
The Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House
that when this House did attend His Excellency this day in the
Senate chamber, His Excellency was pleased to make a speech to
both Houses of Parliament. To prevent mistakes I have obtained a
copy which is as follows:
Honourable Members of the Senate,
Members of the House of Commons,
Ladies and Gentlemen:
My wife, Diana, and I were happy to welcome Her Majesty the Queen and
the Duke of Edinburgh when they arrived in Canada last June and to be
their hosts during their stay in the National Capital over Canada Day.
As Governor General I have visited every province and territory, and I
wish every Canadian could share that experience. Our cities, towns, and
villages reflect the diversity of all those who have come to this
country. And yet our communities, whether on the coasts or the prairies,
whether in the woodlands or on the northern tundra, show the same
friendliness, openness, and generosity.
People care for each other in many ways, and they give their time and
their support to their community.
When I became Governor General, I stated my intention to honour the
generosity of Canadians, especially as demonstrated by volunteers. We
have now created the Caring Canadian Award to recognize the most
dedicated among them.
In my functions, I visit with many units of the Canadian Forces. They
have impressed me with their dedication, as demonstrated by their
peacekeeping role, their heroic work in search and rescue, and their
immediate response to natural disasters such as the Saguenay region and
Red River floods.
Let me mention another source of great pride: the proclamation of the
twenty-first of June, the longest day of the year, as National
Aboriginal Day—a day to honour the First Peoples of this land.
A New Parliament—
Today marks the opening of a new Parliament, the last Parliament of the
20th century and the first Parliament of the 21st century, a Parliament
with a unique and historic opportunity to provide leadership on national
issues to secure the future for Canadians.
On June 2, 1997, the people of Canada renewed the mandate of the
Government. Over the course of this Parliament, the Government will
fulfil the commitments it made to the people in its election platform.
The Parliament of Canada is the only institution directly elected by all
Canadians with the mandate to protect and express the national interest.
Elected by all Canadians and endowed with the legitimacy that this
bestows, the Government of Canada will stand up for the shared values of
Canadians at home and abroad.
But governing in the 21st century also means recognizing that no one
government can act alone. Given the complexity of the issues that face
us as citizens in a global economy, collaboration is an essential
ingredient for the success of Canada. More than ever, Canadians want
their governments to work together in partnership.
As we look forward to the beginning of a new millennium with new
challenges and new opportunities, we can look back at the last century
of Canadian history and state with certainty that Canada is rightly
regarded, the world over, as an extraordinary success. Canada represents
a triumph of the human spirit, bringing together the best of what people
can do.
—For a New Century of Canadian Achievement
As the 21st century approaches, Canadians face changes in technology and
information that are as profound as those of the Industrial Revolution
and that are creating dramatic opportunities for our growth and
development. As old and familiar constraints of time and distance are
breaking down, individuals and communities can accomplish things once
unimaginable.
Canada is ready. We are poised for success. Our citizens have the
qualities that are needed to succeed in the 21st century:
We have the values of sharing and mutual help.
We are well educated.
We welcome innovation and new ideas.
We are an open and democratic society.
We are a bilingual and multicultural country at a time of increasing
globalization.
We have learned to accommodate our differences and diversity and turn
them into strengths.
Our federation makes the most of these talents. It gives us the cohesion
we need to multiply our strengths by combining our talents, by pooling
our resources and by sharing risks. It also gives us the flexibility we
need to experiment and innovate in order to succeed in a rapidly
changing world.
The Government wishes to recognize the important role of a professional,
non-partisan public service in a well-performing civil society. Canada
is served well by its public service, and the effort and dedication it
exhibits in meeting the needs of citizens and in building partnerships
among governments and other sectors of society. The Government will
continue to renew the Public Service of Canada to ensure its members
have the skills and dedication to continue serving Canadians well.
We Have Already Built a Foundation for Our Success
In recent years, Canadians worked hard and sacrificed to overcome many
of our nation's challenges. We succeeded, and have started to put in
place a strong foundation for our success in the new millennium.
This 36th Parliament opens at a time when we have brought order to our
public finances, and the economy is entering a period of strong growth.
While unemployment is still too high, hundreds of thousands of new jobs
are being created by the private sector, inflation is at very low
levels, and interest rates are lower than they have been in more than
three decades. More Canadian companies are selling more goods and
services to the world than ever before.
Stimulating job creation and economic growth has been, remains, and will
continue to be a major objective of the Government of Canada. The
Government will build on the progress achieved and the foundations put
in place over the last four years to strengthen the economy and increase
confidence. We will pursue this course and take further action to
encourage new investment, to create new jobs, and to generate the
national wealth necessary to assure Canadians a stable and secure
future.
The Government will continue to be vigilant and responsible about
keeping the financial affairs of the country in order:
It will put the debt-to-GDP ratio on a permanent downward track.
It will balance the budget no later than fiscal year 1998-99.
It will seek to devote one-half of the surplus in this mandate to
addressing the social and economic needs of Canadians. The other half
will go to a combination of reducing taxes and the national debt.
It will introduce legislation to implement the proposed changes to the
Canada Pension Plan and the new Seniors Benefit in order to ensure
Canada's public pension system remains sustainable in the 21st century.
One in three Canadian jobs depend on trade. Our prosperity and our
ability to create jobs are directly linked to how well we capitalize on
international opportunities. Team Canada trade missions have
successfully generated new opportunities for Canadian businesses and
have illustrated what we can accomplish when governments and the private
sector collaborate. The Government will build on this success with a
focussed strategy, developed in consultation with industry, to improve
our international economic performance by expanding Canada's trade base,
becoming the location of choice for global investment, and making Canada
a preferred tourist destination.
The Government has regained the ability to address priorities of
Canadians while living within its means. It is now in the
position to make strategic investments in our children and our
youth, our health, our communities, and our knowledge and
creativity while continuing to improve the nation's finances.
The Government is committed to following this balanced approach of
social investment and prudent financial management as it leads Canada
toward renewed and lasting economic health and increased social
cohesion.
As important as all of these accomplishments is the fact that the
federal, provincial and territorial governments are developing new and
better ways of working together. We are making the federation better
able to serve the differing needs of Canadians across the country.
Canadians feel better about their own future and the country's future.
We are looking to our future together with a new optimism. The fact that
we have demonstrated our ability as a country to set ambitious goals and
achieve them gives us new confidence to set higher goals for the
years ahead and succeed. We need to go beyond the limits of our
expectations. It is the task of Parliament and the Government to rise to
this new spirit of optimism.
Our Challenge for the Future
Our challenge is to ensure that no Canadian is left behind as the
country moves forward. The future belongs to societies whose economy is
sound; who invest in knowledge, education and innovation; whose
population is healthy; whose children are well prepared to learn; and
who focus on securing a high quality of life for all citizens. Canadians
have already set these priorities for this new Parliament. These are the
Government's priorities.
Building a Stronger Canada
The federal, provincial and territorial governments owe it to all
Canadians to take responsible leadership on the unity of the country.
The single most important commitment of the Government is to keep Canada
united. The Government of Canada can have no greater duty or
responsibility. The overriding goal of the Government of Canada as we
approach the 21st century is both simple and ambitious. It is to
strengthen and unite this country by joining in the common purpose of
keeping Canada one of the best places in the world in which to live.
Our values of openness, tolerance and sharing, our qualities of social
and linguistic diversity, and our high standard of living equip us
exceptionally well for the challenges of the new age.
Canadians want a just and sharing society. A prosperous society. A
tolerant and highly diverse society. A society that fosters excellence
and creativity. Realizing these aspirations fully will require the
active
engagement of Canadians in all walks of life, as well as our
institutions, businesses, voluntary organizations and our governments.
It will require collaboration and partnership. It will require reaching
out.
The federal, provincial and territorial governments have been developing
a more collaborative approach to strengthening and modernizing Canada's
social union—the new National Child Benefit System is an early result
of this new approach. In their meeting last week, nine Premiers and the
two territorial leaders reiterated their desire for closer co-operation
with the federal government in the areas of health care and social
policy. The Government welcomes the Premiers' and territorial leaders'
continuing interest in working together, and is committed to even closer
collaboration on these important issues. As a next step, the First
Ministers will meet this fall to work on co-operative approaches to
address youth unemployment, health care and social policy renewal.
The Government will take a very broad and encompassing approach to
promoting and strengthening our unity. All its major initiatives will
serve to make Canada better and thus more united. The Government will
approach its mandate committed to collaboration and partnership with all
its partners in Canadian society. Canada provides our common space and
our common means for realizing our potential. We would all be forever
diminished, forever changed, should we fail to maintain the example
Canada provides to the world. Our future as a country is too precious
for us to risk losing it through misunderstanding. Therefore, the
Government will bring frankness and clarity to any debate that puts into
question the future existence or unity of Canada. It will create a
better understanding of the true complexity and difficulty for all of us
in severing ties that have developed in building a nation together. Most
of all, it will demonstrate how much more we can do together than apart.
The Government will work closely with provincial and territorial
governments to further advance the progress made by nine Premiers and
the territorial leaders last week in Calgary toward the full recognition
of the diversity inherent in the federation, including the unique
character of Quebec society.
We will build on the mutual respect Canadians have for one another to
achieve our common aspirations for a better future.
Investing in Children
A country that has decided to invest in its children is a country that
is confident in its future. A country that invests in its children
successfully will have a better future. One of our objectives as a
country should be to ensure that all Canadian children have the best
possible opportunity to develop their full potential. We must equip our
children with the capacities they need to be ready to learn and to
participate fully in our society.
While families have the greatest responsibility in the nurturing and
development of our children, they are not alone. Developing our children
requires a concerted effort and partnership by parents, governments, and
the private and the voluntary sectors. It requires focussing on what
children need to thrive.
The experiences of Canada's children, especially in the early years,
influence their health, their well-being, and their ability to learn and
adapt throughout their entire lives. By investing now in the well-being
of today's children, we improve the long-term health of our society.
Addressing the needs of low-income families with children is therefore a
priority of the Government.
Federal, provincial and territorial governments have agreed to address
in a co-operative way the problems of low-income families with children.
Together we are now building the comprehensive and effective National
Child Benefit System.
The Government has already demonstrated its initial commitment to this
project by increasing its contribution to the Canada Child Tax Benefit
by $850 million a year, with higher payments to families beginning July
1, 1998.
The Government will work with its provincial and territorial partners to
establish jointly a common timetable for increasing the federal
contribution to the Canada Child Tax Benefit by at least an additional
$850 million during the course of this mandate. The Government will also
work with the provinces and territories to establish the National
Re-Investment Framework to guide the re-allocation of our partners'
savings into new services and benefits for low-income families with
children.
We can make a difference in the lives of all our children. Children need
a substantial investment of time and attention for healthy development;
they need strong families; they need safe, supportive communities. The
federal, provincial and territorial governments agreed in January 1997
to work together to develop the National Children's Agenda, a
comprehensive strategy to improve the well-being of Canada's children.
Federal, provincial and territorial governments will work together to
develop this broader agenda for children, including clear outcome
measures by which to gauge success. As part of this national agenda, the
federal government will undertake three new initiatives:
It will establish Centres of Excellence to deepen our understanding of
children's development and well-being and to improve our ability to
respond to their needs.
It will expand our Aboriginal Head Start program onto reserves to
ensure that all Aboriginal children have the opportunity to get a good
start in life.
It will measure and report regularly on the readiness of Canadian
children to learn, so that we can assess our progress in providing our
children with the best possible start.
Investing in Quality Care and Good Health
For decades, the Canadian health care system has been a source of pride
for Canadians: it reflects the fundamental values that Canadians most
cherish. Our publicly financed system of health care is recognized at
home and abroad as simply the best in the world.
Nonetheless, there is an increasing anxiety among Canadians about the
present state and the future of our medicare system. Citizens worry
about whether they will have access to the highest possible quality of
health care when they need it. The anxiety arises from a number of
sources, including the pace and extent of restructuring that has gone on
in recent years.
The federal government recognizes that this restructuring has been
difficult for Canadians and, therefore, it will increase health care
funding to the provinces from previously budgeted levels. It will
introduce legislation to increase to $12.5 billion a year the guaranteed
annual cash payments to provinces and territories under the Canada
Health and Social Transfer.
One of our goals as a country must be to continue providing all our
citizens with access to the highest possible quality of health care and
the other tools they will need to enjoy healthy lives as we move into
the 21st century. Canadians have a right to expect their governments to
work together in harmony to better meet the shared goals and desires of
Canadians for a better health system.
The Government is firmly committed to a publicly administered,
comprehensive health care system that provides universal access to high
quality care for Canadians anywhere in the country.
The Government has a leadership role in preserving and enhancing
medicare. It has a constructive role to play as a partner with provinces
and other interested parties. The Government will play that role in a
spirit of openness, pragmatism and innovation. There are steps that we
can and will take to lead the efforts by all governments.
Preparing Canada for the 21st century means ensuring the medicare system
meets the needs of the future. It means responding to emerging issues in
health care. Working with its partners, the Government will undertake
the following initiatives:
It will take measures to support Canadians in responding to the
expanding needs for home care and community care.
It will develop a national plan, timetable and a fiscal framework for
providing Canadians with better access to medically necessary drugs.
It will improve the quality and effectiveness of health services across
Canada by establishing the Health Transition Fund to help the provincial
governments innovate in the areas of primary care and provide more
integration in the delivery of health services, home care and
pharmacare.
Canadians recognize that good health depends on much more than medical
care. Our social and economic situations also help to determine the
quality of our health. As a country, we must increase our efforts to
promote healthy lives. The Government will contribute to this goal with
an agenda to promote good health. Emphasis will also be placed on those
factors that determine the health of a country's population, including
the equality of economic and social opportunity for all citizens.
Some of the most urgent health problems today are found in Aboriginal
communities. The Government will work with other partners and Aboriginal
communities to
develop new initiatives to address the rapid increase in tuberculosis
and diabetes in Aboriginal communities; and
enhance research and dissemination of health information focussed on
the needs of Aboriginal people through a new Aboriginal Health
Institute.
To fulfil other pressing health needs, the Government will expand the
Canadian breast cancer initiative, renew the national HIV-AIDS strategy;
and double the resources for the tobacco reduction strategy, with a
particular focus on community-based programs to prevent young Canadians
from starting to smoke and to encourage smokers to quit.
The Government will work with its provincial partners and other
interested parties to improve Canadian health information systems to
improve decision making about health and health care across the country.
Building Safer Communities
Safe communities are among the hallmarks of our Canadian identity. While
the reported crime rate has decreased for four consecutive years, it is
still too high. The Government is committed to ensuring that Canada
remains a place where Canadians feel secure in their homes and on the
streets of their communities. A safe society depends on strong crime
prevention efforts as well as traditional legal responses. Governments
around the world are developing community-based crime prevention
programs.
The Government will help protect the right of all Canadians to feel safe
in their communities by working with other governments, the private
sector and voluntary groups. It will
increase funding for community-based crime-prevention initiatives to
$30 million per year;
develop alternatives to incarceration for low-risk, non-violent
offenders, such as sentencing reforms, community diversion programs, and
alternative sanctions; and
integrate information systems of all partners in the criminal justice
system.
Creating Opportunity for Young Canadians
Today's generation of young Canadians is the best educated in our
history. Young Canadians are living in a country well-positioned for
opportunities in the new economy. Yet, the level of unemployment among
Canadians between the ages of 18 and 25 is unacceptably high. The
federal, provincial and territorial governments will act to address this
problem, and First Ministers and territorial leaders will be working on
this issue when they meet this fall.
To secure our future as a society, our immediate challenge is to make
sure that our young generation makes a successful transition to the
world of work, that young people who want to continue to learn have
access to education, and that young people who found it difficult
getting started in the workplace get a second chance.
All Canadians have a stake in meeting this challenge successfully. No
single sector of society nor any one level of government has all the
answers. We must all contribute, each in our areas of competency, to
meet the challenge we have set for ourselves. The Government welcomes
the action being taken by the private sector, through initiatives such
as Career Edge and the Corporate Council on Youth in the Economy, and
encourages the private sector to do more. The Government is committed to
work with other governments, the private sector, communities and
individual Canadians to help equip young people for the future.
An important role for governments is to ensure the widest possible
access to post-secondary education. Canadians are concerned about the
increasing cost of higher education, and the resulting debt burden on
students. The Government took some important measures to address this
problem in its budget of February 1997. The Government will continue to
reduce barriers to post-secondary education through further changes to
the Canada Student Loans Program, increased assistance for students with
dependents, and new scholarships to encourage excellence and to help
low- and moderate-income Canadians attend university or college.
The Government finds it unacceptable that thousands of jobs are going
unfilled in high-growth sectors of our economy at the same time as young
Canadians are unemployed. The Government will work with the provinces,
universities and colleges, the high-tech industry and other rapidly
growing sectors to better forecast the number and types of jobs that
will be available and to develop a plan for ensuring that people are
appropriately educated to fill them.
Three factors make a significant difference to young people getting
started in the world of work—a good education, a chance at a first
job, and a mentor to work with as they establish themselves. The
Government will increase its resources devoted to helping youth to make
a smooth and productive entry into the world of work. Internship
programs have been particularly successful in helping young people get
started. These programs will be extended and expanded. Enhanced funding
of student summer placements will be continued. In partnership with
provincial governments and the private sector, a Canada-wide mentorship
program will be developed.
To help those young Canadians who need a second chance, the Government
will develop and expand community-based programs for youth with the
greatest difficulty making the transition to the world of work because
of low education and skills. These will include establishing
multi-purpose Aboriginal youth centres that will provide targeted social
and cultural support in addition to increasing work and learning
opportunities for urban Aboriginal youth.
The Government will continue to support efforts of individuals,
communities and other governments to improve Canadians' capacity to
learn throughout their lives.
Investing in Knowledge and Creativity
The revolution in the knowledge and information economy is transforming
all sectors of the economy from primary resources to service industries.
Canada is well-positioned to be a world leader in the global
knowledge-based economy of the 21st century. We have the talent, we have
the resources, we have the technology, and we have the institutions.
By rising to the challenge of mobilizing our resources well, we can
enable our citizens to succeed in the global knowledge-based economy.
This is how we will spur continuing job creation and sustained growth in
our standard of living in the 21st century. The Government is determined
to do more to support innovation and risk-taking in Canada and to
attract more foreign investment in knowledge-based industries to Canada.
We will build creative partnerships between the private and public
sectors to accelerate the adoption of innovative technologies in all
sectors of the economy.
With targeted growth strategies, we will build those knowledge-intensive
sectors where we are strong and where the opportunities for growth and
global leadership is highest. Examples are aerospace;
bio-pharmaceuticals; bio-technology in agriculture and fisheries; and
the environmental, information, and telecommunications technologies. In
particular, the Government will significantly increase the resources
allocated to help small and medium-size businesses develop and
commercialize new technology.
The Government will explore innovative policies and measures that give
particular attention to increasing opportunity for Canadians in rural
communities. It will adapt its programs to reflect the social and
economic realities of rural Canada. Further, the Government will
redouble its efforts to ensure that rural communities and all regions of
Canada share in the economic benefits of the global knowledge-based
economy.
Governments have a crucial role to play in supporting science,
technology, and the creation of knowledge. The Government of Canada's
endowment of the Canada Foundation for Innovation in partnership with
the private sector, the provinces and universities, is helping to build
a leading-edge national system of innovation. All levels of government
must do more to provide public support for research done in our
universities.
Support for knowledge goes beyond support for university research.
Increasing support for the arts makes it possible for Canadian culture
to reach audiences at home and abroad. Our movies, books, magazines,
plays, videos, music, and multi-media productions speak to us about our
experiences at the same time as they present Canadian creativity to the
world. Therefore, the Government of Canada will provide increased
support to the Canada Council and will make special efforts to support
culture at home and to promote trade in Canadian cultural and
educational products and services abroad.
We will make the information and knowledge infrastructure accessible to
all Canadians by the year 2000, thereby making Canada the most connected
nation in the world. This will provide individuals, schools, libraries,
small and large businesses, rural and Aboriginal communities, public
institutions, and all levels of government with new opportunities for
learning, interacting, transacting business and developing their social
and economic potential. For example, we will enhance the voluntary
sector's capacity to engage Canadians by improving their access to the
technology they need to play a stronger role in Canadian life.
A connected nation is more than wires, cables and computers. It is a
nation in which citizens have access to the skills and knowledge they
need to benefit from Canada's rapidly changing knowledge and information
infrastructure. It is also a nation whose people are connected to each
other. The Government will continue to work with provinces to ensure
greater mobility for people with disabilities and to ensure their
integration into the economic and social mainstream of Canadian life.
The Government will also bring forward measures to strengthen networks
among Canadians and to increase knowledge of Canada and understanding
among Canadians; these measures will include enhanced exchange programs
for young Canadians.
Expanding Opportunities in Aboriginal Communities
Thousands of years ago, Aboriginal people began building Canada's first
communities. Today, by strengthening our Aboriginal communities, we are
reinforcing the diversity that makes Canada unique in the world. The
Government will
develop relationships with Aboriginal people based on the principles of
partnership, transparency, predictability and accountability;
support the building of strong Aboriginal communities—communities
that provide their members with better living standards and
opportunities; and
strengthen the capacity for good government in Aboriginal communities.
To contribute, the Government of Canada is committed to respond to the
Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples as soon as
possible.
Looking Outward
Our country has a tradition of being a responsible, engaged, committed
world citizen. This is a key characteristic of our national identity and
a source of pride to Canadians. Canada is a force for peace and
understanding around the world, for bridging differences, and for
finding common ground. Canada espouses the common humanity that binds
together the human family.
This tradition is the legacy of Nobel laureate and former prime minister
of Canada, Lester Pearson, whose 100th birthday we mark this year.
Canadians want their government to carry on this tradition and give it
new relevance as the world enters a new century.
Nothing better illustrates the ongoing commitment to this tradition than
Canada's leadership since 1994 in the international effort to ban
anti-personnel mines. This Canadian initiative has evolved from a bold
idea to be the focus of a large and growing international consensus that
will culminate in the signing of an international treaty in Ottawa in
December of this year.
Canada's rich and diverse natural heritage is also a source of national
pride and international acclaim. Canadians are both the beneficiaries
and the stewards of a land that holds 9% of the Earth's fresh
water, 10% of its forests, and 25% of its wetlands.
Canadians both delight in our magnificent environment and fear for its
future. Maintaining what is good, and improving what has been degraded,
requires constant effort. It is an effort that the Government will make.
The Government is committed to working in the international community to
promote sustainable development and to achieve practical solutions to
global environmental problems, such as greenhouse gas emissions and
toxic chemicals. It will also continue to address the serious
international problem of over-fishing. It is committed to acting at home
to reduce our contribution to these problems.
In this same Canadian tradition of internationalism, the Government will
undertake the following initiatives:
It will promote Canadian values on the world stage by co-operating with
like-minded countries to revitalize the United Nations and
other key multilateral institutions. It will work directly with other
countries to enhance and promote human rights, peace building and
democracy.
It will destroy the Department of National Defence's stock of land
mines, in advance of the signing of the Ottawa Treaty in December, to
continue its leadership and illustrate its commitment to a global ban.
And Canada will continue to work toward an accompanying international
strategy to help land mine victims recover and civilian populations
reclaim their land from these mines.
It will continue to move forward with reforms to the Canadian military.
It will continue its campaign for liberalized trade. Breaking down
trade barriers, both within Canada and around the world, helps ensure
markets for Canadian goods and services and provides the best
opportunity for greater prosperity.
Celebrating the Millennium
For Canadians, the start of the new millennium represents an historic
opportunity to celebrate our achievements as a nation and our hopes for
the future. It will be an unequalled opportunity to show ourselves and
the world the richness of our diversity, the strength of Canadian
values, and the great promise of our future in the 21st century.
The Government will help build a partnership among governments,
communities and citizens to mark the new millennium. Many Canadians have
creative ideas and suggestions for millennium projects. There will also
be an opportunity for parliamentarians from all parties to participate
in developing ideas to mark the millennium.
Moving Forward into the 21st Century
Almost 100 years ago, Sir Wilfrid Laurier said, “The 20th century shall
be the century of Canada and of Canadian development.” He was right.
Today, we have the opportunity for success in the 21st century that is
far beyond what Laurier could have ever imagined.
To achieve this success we have more work to do—work that no one can
do alone. Each and every one of us must assume personal responsibility
for our community and our country. Our greatest responsibility is to
build a new spirit of sharing and mutual respect for a new century.
By working together, by respecting the value of our diversity, we will
secure our future and build a stronger country. We will ensure that our
future economic opportunities are sound, our children well prepared, our
lives healthy, and our communities strong.
Each generation has the opportunity to choose the society it wants to
leave for its children. The greatest legacy we can leave to our children
in the new millennium is a vibrant living legacy that will make Canada a
better place: a stronger country with a brighter future and greater
opportunities for its young people. By working together, we will build
that future.
Members of the House of Commons:
You will be asked to appropriate the funds required to carry out the
services and expenditures authorized by Parliament.
Honourable Members of the Senate/Members of the House of
Commons:
May Divine Providence guide you in your deliberations.
1555
[Translation]
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.) moved:
That the speech of His Excellency the Governor General,
delivered this day from the Throne to the two Houses of Parliament,
be taken into consideration later today.
(Motion agreed to)
* * *
[English]
BOARD OF INTERNAL ECONOMY
The Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House that
the following members have been appointed as members of the Board
of Internal Economy for the purposes and under the provisions of
the act to amend the Parliament of Canada Act, Chapter 42, (First
Supplement), the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, namely:
Mr. Boudria and Mr. Gagliano, members of the Queen's Privy
Council; Mr. Kilger and Ms. Catterall, representatives of the
government caucus; Mr. Strahl and Mr. White
(Langley—Abbotsford), representatives of the Reform caucus; and
Mr. Bergeron, representative of the Bloc Quebecois.
* * *
STANDING ORDERS
Hon. Don Boudria (Glengarry—Prescott—Russell, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, pursuant to notice, I move that the Standing Orders be
amended as follows:
1. In section (1) of Standing Order 104, by deleting the word
“fourteen” and by substituting therefor the word “sixteen”;
2. By deleting section (2) of Standing Order 104 and by substituting
the following therefor:
(2) The standing committees, which shall consist of
the number of Members stipulated below, and for which the
lists of members are to be prepared, except as provided in
section (1) of this Standing Order, shall be on:
(a) Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development (sixteen
Members);
(b) Agriculture and Agri-Food (sixteen Members);
(c) Canadian Heritage (sixteen Members);
(d) Citizenship and Immigration (sixteen Members);
(e) Environment and Sustainable Development (sixteen
Members);
(f) Finance (sixteen Members);
(g) Fisheries and Oceans (sixteen Members);
(h) Foreign Affairs and International Trade (sixteen
Members);
(i) Health (sixteen Members);
(j) Human Resources Development and the Status of Persons
with Disabilities (sixteen Members);
(k) Industry (sixteen Members);
(l) Justice and Human Rights (sixteen Members);
(m) National Defence and Veterans Affairs (sixteen
Members);
(n) Natural Resources and Government Operations (sixteen
Members);
(o) Procedure and House Affairs (sixteen Members);
(p) Public Accounts (seventeen Members); and
(q) Transport (sixteen Members).
3. By deleting subsection (c) of section (3) of Standing
Order 108 and by substituting therefor the following:
(c) Human Resources Development and the Status of Persons
with Disabilities shall include, among other matters, the
proposing, promoting, monitoring and assessing of initiatives
aimed at the integration and equality of disabled persons in all
sectors of Canadian society;
(d) Justice and Human Rights shall include, among other
matters, the review and report on reports of the Canadian Human
Rights Commission, which shall be deemed permanently referred to
the Committee immediately after they are laid upon the Table;
And by renumbering subsection (d) of section (3) of
Standing Order 108 as subsection (e);
And that the Members to serve on the Standing Committee on Procedure
and House Affairs be Mr. Adams, Mr. Baker, Mr. Bergeron, Mr. Blaikie, Ms.
Catterall, Mr. Charbonneau, Mrs. Dalphond-Guiral; Mr. Doyle, Mr. Epp, Mr.
Harb, Mr. Kilger (Stormont-Dundas), Mr. Pagtakhan, Ms. Parrish, Mr.
Richardson, Mr. Strahl, and Mr. White (Langley-Abbotsford).
(Motion agreed to)
* * *
COMMITTEES OF THE WHOLE
APPOINTMENT OF CHAIRMAN
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I move:
That Mr. Peter Milliken, member for the electoral district of
Kingston and the Islands, be appointed Deputy Speaker and
chairman of the committees of the whole House.
(Motion agreed to)
1600
The Speaker: I too would like to welcome on your behalf
the hon. member for Kingston and the Islands as Deputy Speaker of
the House. I too look forward to working very closely with him
over the years ahead.
APPOINTMENT OF DEPUTY CHAIRMAN
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I move, seconded by the Leader of the Opposition:
That Mr. Ian McClelland, member for the electoral district of
Edmonton Southwest, be appointed deputy chairman of committees of
the whole House.
(Motion agreed to)
The Speaker: Once again, I welcome the hon. member to the
Chair.
[Translation]
APPOINTMENT OF ASSISTANT DEPUTY CHAIRMAN
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I move:
That Ms. Yolande Thibeault, member for the electoral district
of Saint-Lambert, be appointed Assistant Deputy Chairman of
Committees of the Whole House.
(Motion agreed to)
[English]
The Speaker: I welcome you, my colleague, also. If we
have team Canada, this is team Parliament. Welcome aboard.
* * *
[Translation]
SUPPLY
Hon. Don Boudria (Leader of the Government in the House of Commons,
Lib.): Mr. Speaker, pursuant to notice, I move:
That, notwithstanding any Standing Order, seven days
shall be allotted to the business of supply for the period
ending December 10, 1997.
That all opposition motions on allotted days in the
said period may be motions that shall come to a vote,
provided that not more than three of the said motions shall
be included in the calculations for three supply periods as
provided for in section (16) of Standing Order 81:
That all Main Estimates and Supplementary Estimates
shall be deemed to have been reported from committees not
later than three sitting days before the seventh allotted
day in the said period;
That, not later than fifteen minutes before the expiry
of the time provided for the consideration of Government
Orders on the seventh allotted day in the said period, the
Speaker shall interrupt any proceedings before the House and
shall put forthwith and successively, without further debate
or amendment, all questions necessary to dispose of any item
falling under the business of supply, including any
opposition motion and all motions relating to Main Estimates
and Supplementary Estimates and to any Appropriation Act or
Acts based thereon; provided
That, subject to provisions of this Order, the business
of supply shall otherwise be conducted in accordance with
Standing Order 81.
(Motion agreed to)
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and Minister
responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I move:
(Motion agreed to)
* * *
[English]
SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
ADDRESS IN REPLY
The House proceeded to the consideration of the speech delivered
by His Excellency the Governor General at the opening of the
session.
Ms. Sarmite Bulte (Parkdale—High Park, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, it is a very great privilege and an honour that has been
bestowed upon me today to make this motion which is to be
seconded by the hon. member for Beauce for the Address in Reply
to the Speech from the Throne.
[Translation]
I would like to thank the Prime Minister and the government for the
honour they have bestowed on the people of Parkdale—High Park with
their motion.
[English]
I am also honoured and privileged to be the first member of
Parliament of Latvian and Baltic States heritage to take a seat
in the House of Commons, which in Latvian is stated as follows:
[Editor's Note: Member spoke in Latvian as follows:]
Man ir liels prieks un Gods but pirma Latviesu un Baltiesu
Deputate Kanadas Parlamenta.
1605
[English]
I would like to thank the people of Parkdale—High Park who have
placed their trust and confidence in me to represent their
interests in the House of Commons. As their member I vow to work
with my colleagues and in partnership with the private and
non-profit sectors to address the challenges which we face today
and in the future.
I would also like to especially acknowledge and thank my hon.
predecessor Mr. Jesse Flis who represented the riding of
Parkdale—High Park for over 14 years. I would like to thank him
for the legacy he has left in the riding. Mr. Flis, we salute,
thank and applaud you.
[Translation]
The riding of Parkdale—High Park, a microcosm of Canada, is one of
the most culturally and economically diverse ridings in this country.
[English]
It is a very united riding, a riding that takes strength from
its diversity and its sense of community, a riding which is
exemplary of what can be accomplished through community based
activities and initiatives, a riding that shows that diversity
does not equate to disunity.
I believe that fostering partnerships is a key to addressing the
issues and challenges which we will face today and in the future.
In that context I would like to address three issues: job
creation, the development of safe and prosperous communities, and
the importance of the arts in articulating Canada's identity.
In its previous mandate this government committed to Canadians
that it would ensure its strong economic fundamentals would be in
place in order to promote economic recovery and job creation. The
Prime Minister and his government have been successful at meeting
and surpassing their targets of deficit reduction. The
government predicts that we shall see the deficit eliminated well
prior to the end of this mandate. I commend my colleagues on
their achievements.
[Translation]
Our purpose must now be to take advantage of a vigorous economy and
create jobs. In my opinion, the government has a duty to ease job
creation by promoting the kind of economic environment we need and by
nurturing partnerships with the private and non-profit sectors.
[English]
The Minister of Finance has completed the first task. The
Minister of Industry and his colleagues are now responding to the
second task with their jobs strategy.
One aspect of the jobs strategy is to target youth employment.
As the mother of three children I commend the government for the
initiative it has recently undertaken with the announcement of
the youth internship program. This program is a partnership
combining the efforts of the federal government, the YMCA, and
Career Edge, the non-profit agency developed by 100 Canadian
corporations to promote youth employment.
One of Canada's chartered banks has recently undertaken a
comprehensive national study of the attitudes of Canada's nexus
generation who are young people between the ages of 18 and 35.
This study reveals that this group is much more entrepreneurial
and positive than usually depicted. One-third of nexus
respondents stated that their most desirable profession was
entrepreneur, suggesting that young Canadians are determined to
turn their innovative ideas into business realities.
Further to this, it is my belief that government does not create
jobs, the private sector does. In Canada over the last three
years 70 per cent to 80 per cent of new jobs were created by small and medium
size businesses.
1610
Small business needs access to capital, trade and technology.
Government can help small business by encouraging banks,
including the Business Development Bank of Canada, to lend money
to these entrepreneurs.
As well, government can support small business by arranging
trade missions such as the successful team Canada initiatives and
the November trade mission to Washington for women business
owners.
Women-owned businesses are a significant sector of our economy.
As a founding member of the Women Entrepreneurs of Canada, I know
first hand about the strength of women-owned businesses.
At the recent Women Leaders' Network for APEC Economies held in
Ottawa, it was noted that 700,000 companies in Canada are owned
by women and that they employ 1.7 million people, which is
greater than the Canadian Business top 100 companies. They
are also creating jobs at a rate four times the national average.
Private trade missions should be encouraged. Organizations such
as Les Femmes Chefs d'Entreprises Mondiales are vehicles through
which private citizens can act as goodwill ambassadors and
introduce Canadian products and services to other countries.
In August I held job creation focus groups with business people,
community leaders and residents in Parkdale—High Park. I also
met with leaders from the arts community and Women Entrepreneurs
of Canada. Several critical points emerged from these
discussions.
It was emphasized that it was important to support small
business and to reduce the amount of official paperwork and red
tape that is required for the functioning of a small business.
Further, I was told about the real importance of developing
strong community structures such as co-operative business
development and the need to continue spending dollars on
infrastructure which brings new technologies such as fibre optic
cable and ISDN connections to the community.
[Translation]
Although supporting technology is of primary importance, we must
acknowledge there is a need for a healthy environment as well as
excellent basic facilities such as skating rinks, parks and community
centres. A strong and prosperous community is safe and a safe community
will be strong and thriving.
[English]
In Parkdale—High Park just last month the Parkdale Community
Watch won the distinguished 1997 International Society of Crime
Prevention Practitioners community based program of the year
award. This award acknowledges the success and initiative that
Parkdale residents have taken toward combating crime in their
community.
This government recognizes the importance of these initiatives
as evidenced by the recent announcement by the Minister of
Justice that $150 million will be allocated over the next five
years to foster such community based programs.
Creating partnerships with communities is essential. The value
of community impact statements must be acknowledged, particularly
in the case of alleged victimless crimes such as drugs and
prostitution where the impact on the community is significant.
Consideration must be given to the imposition of more minimum
sentences, allowing communities access to the briefing of federal
judges and passing legislation to require the proceeds of crime
to be reinvested into those communities affected.
My constituents strongly believe that health and justice must
work together in partnership with communities not only to fight
crime but to fight the causes of crime.
[Translation]
Young offenders are one of the greatest tragedies of crime.
Victims of crime are not alone in feeling their loss, society too
experiences a loss—that of the potential of a young life.
1615
We must redouble our efforts to rehabilitate young offenders
and provide whatever support it takes to discourage repeat
offenders. We must, however, ensure that, in the case of violent
young offenders, the needs and demands of the public form part of
vigorous measures taken to protect society.
[English]
As a lawyer I applaud the Minister of Justice on her commitment
to work with her provincial colleagues to reform the justice
system in such a way as to better acknowledge the voice of all
victims of crime.
I would now like to address one area about which I am
particularly passionate, the arts in Canada. As the former
volunteer chair of one of Canada's foremost arts organizations I
believe we must invest in programs, opportunities and
partnerships which support our culture. This is one of our
greatest responsibilities.
[Translation]
A country's real strength lies in its people. The arts and
the culture of a people are the expressions of its heart and soul.
It is the movies, television, music, painting, dance and theatre
that enable Canadians to laugh, talk and cry together. Through
them we can express our identity and our similarities and
differences.
[English]
I believe in investment, in investing in the development of
original Canadian artistic product. Without our own product,
without our own voices, without a generation that shares our
vision to keep our culture alive and meaningful, Canada will have
no legacy. Without this we will never get that opportunity to
see our hopes and dreams reflected. Instead we will have to
watch and live vicariously through others.
Members will hear me speak in Parliament about the arts industry
because I believe it is just that, an industry. When we start
looking at it that way some surprising things turn up.
The cultural sector represents a significant part of the
Canadian economy. The cultural sector contributes $25 billion to
Canada's gross domestic product. This means 900,000 jobs or 6.9
per cent of total employment.
Last year Canadians spent over $2.9 billion on arts events and
products. For every dollar that the federal government has
invested in the arts industry ten dollars of economic activity
has been generated, an excellent rate of return.
These numbers do not even acknowledge the spin off effect the
culture also brings to our economy. “The House of Martin
Guerre” a critically acclaimed production by Canadian composer
Leslie Arden, brings people not only to the Canadian Stage
Company but also to the restaurants, bars and hotels nearby.
[Translation]
In Canada, the arts play a leading role in enabling Canadians to
define themselves in relation to one another and to the rest of the
world. If we want a strong national identity, we must ensure that
control over our cultural institutions, publishing houses, radio and
television networks and film productions rests with us.
[English]
The Liberal government believes that we should balance spending
in this sector with a plan to invest in the future of Canadian
culture. Artists and arts organizations will play a major role
in determining how Canadians see themselves in 20 years.
The arts are on the cutting edge of the development of new
communications and new technologies which will play a major role
in not only the economic prosperity of Canada but in the world.
1620
We should remember that the arts industry's sustenance and growth
and the commensurate benefit to government revenues and Canadian
society can be assisted by the Government of Canada without
increasing the federal debt.
I applaud the federal government's commitment to cultural
organizations such as the Canadian Publishing Development
Corporation and the Canada Council for the Arts, which is
celebrating its 40th anniversary. The creation of the Canada
television and cable production fund has supported the creation
of excellent Canadian programming.
We should acknowledge the unique and important voice that the
CBC provides to Canadian culture and Canadian life. We must
continue to ensure the long term health of Canada and at the same
time we should make sure we put in place partnerships to ensure
that Canada's arts organizations and artists have a chance to
continue to promote and develop the ideas, hopes and aspirations
of all Canadians.
The time has come to show the world that Canada has writers,
artists, directors and performers second to none, and that we can
develop artistic endeavours here in Canada which will be produced
all over the world. Canada as an exporter of Canadian cultural
products and not an importer? I say welcome to the new
millennium.
As members we have all been entrusted with an important
responsibility, that of giving political leadership to Canada as
we move into challenging times. While we may not all agree on
the policy steps required, we do all commit to serving the best
interests of our country. It is this difference of opinion that
divides us into five parties and which will lead to spirited
debate in this Parliament.
[Translation]
Debates are at the heart of parliamentary democracy, where it is
appropriate to support opposing views. Our political history has shown
that the true superiority of the parliamentary system can be fully
appreciated through the diversity of views being represented.
[English]
I am proud to confirm my support for the Prime Minister and the
Government of Canada. I vow to facilitate a true partnership
among all Canadians toward making Canada an even greater country.
I hereby move, seconded by the hon. member for Beauce, that the
following address be presented to His Excellency the Governor
General of Canada:
[Translation]
To His Excellency the Right Honourable Roméo A.
LeBlanc, a Member of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada,
Chancellor and Principal Companion of the Order of Canada,
Chancellor and Commander of the Order of Military Merit,
Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of Canada.
May it please your Excellency:
We, Her Majesty's most loyal and dutiful subjects, the
House of Commons of Canada, in Parliament assembled, beg
leave to offer our humble thanks to Your Excellency for the
gracious Speech which Your Excellency has addressed to both
Houses of Parliament.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
1625
Mr. Claude Drouin (Beauce, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I wish to pay
tribute to His Excellency the Governor General, Mr. Roméo LeBlanc, and
to thank him for giving the throne speech before both Houses.
I would also like to congratulate you, Mr. Speaker, on being
re-elected to the Chair. We feel, and you have demonstrated to us, that
you have all the qualities required for the important job of directing
the work of the House.
I would also like to thank the Prime Minister, who honoured me by
asking me to move the Address in Reply to the Speech from the Throne.
In addition, I would like to congratulate all my colleagues on
being elected to office. Representing one's constituents well is no
small challenge and I know that each of us, with God's help, will carry
out our duties conscientiously, with respect for the institutions we
serve and, of course, for the citizens of our country, Canada.
I represent the wonderful riding of Beauce. I would like to take
this opportunity to thank all my constituents for the very great honour
they have bestowed on me by electing me to represent them in the House
of Commons.
Our riding, the cradle of small and medium size enterprise and
entrepreneurship, is located in the Chaudière-Appalaches region, in
southern Quebec just across the border from the United States. It is my
fortune to represent one of the most beautiful regions in the province.
Our economy is made up of businesses working in very diversified
sectors.
From agriculture and forestry to manufacturing and the service
industries, each sector is well represented in our economy. And let us
not forget our excellent maple syrup, a favourite with everyone.
Our region boasts several well known enterprises. It is thanks to
names like Dutil, Lacroix, Pomerleau, Poulin, Vachon, and the list goes
on, that our region is seen as an economic leader and envied by all. It
is because of these enterprises that it has often been said that the
Beauce region is the kingdom of SMBs. The Beauce region, along with the
Chaudière-Appalaches region, has one of the lowest unemployment rates in
Quebec, 6.1 per cent in August of this year.
What sets our region apart from others is that when we have a
problem, we look for a solution, not a culprit.
Instead of going over old ground when it was elected to office on
October 25, 1993, the Liberal government helped put an end to the
crisis.
[English]
Today, after four years of Liberal government, Canada's economic
performance is one of the best among the G-7 industrial nations,
and the future looks even more promising. That is why Canadians
can look forward with great hope to the future.
[Translation]
From the time of its first election in October 1993, the
Liberal government has made job creation its top priority. Since
then, close to a million jobs have been created in the country, and
the unemployment rate has dropped from 11.2 to 9%. The
Liberal government's re-election will ensure that the policies
responsible for revitalizing the economy will be continued.
1630
In its Employment Strategy, the Liberal government has put
public finances back on a sound footing, starting by addressing the
problem of the huge deficits inherited from past governments. It
has reduced the deficit from $42 billion to under $14 billion.
This is a remarkable drop, over $28 billion in four years, or a
reduction of over 70 percent. The Liberal government is committed
to continuing along this same path, with a view to attaining a zero
deficit by 1998-99.
This good management has made it possible to keep interest and
inflation rates at their lowest. These rates, moreover, help
businesses to invest and to create jobs, which encourages purchases
of major consumer goods.
Once the budget is balanced, half of each billion dollar budgetary
surplus will be used to cut taxes and reduce the debt. The other
half will be invested in important social and economic programs,
including job creation initiatives.
Our government believes in young people. It invests annually
in programs that enable young Canadians to acquire the knowledge
and experience they need to get their careers off to a good start.
In addition, it recently announced the youth internship program in
the federal public sector.
The government's priorities are first and foremost employment,
improved public finances and Canadian unity.
For the past 130 years, Canada's achievements have earned this
country the admiration of the whole world.
In fact, according to the United Nations, Canada happens to provide the
best quality of life of any country in the world. We have reached this
level of excellence largely thanks to the values of equality and
diversity which we hold dear. To preserve and improve our federation is
to preserve and improve the way we live.
The Liberal government has demonstrated the flexibility and vigour
of Canadian federalism. This same government has put forward new
strategies for getting rid of duplication among levels of government,
while showing greater respect for the jurisdictions set forth in the
Constitution. The manpower agreement, for instance, is an example of our
government's desire for a modern federalism.
With the provinces, we have also reached an agreement on
environmental harmonization. We have withdrawn from programs of direct
involvement in mining and forestry development and have suggested
transferring management of social housing to the provinces.
Finally, we suggested introducing federal-provincial mechanisms to deal
with securities, food inspection and revenue collection.
The principle of a new federalism will continue to guide our
actions during the government's present mandate.
Every year, more than 300,000 Canadians learn French, in a country
that should be proud of its two languages and two cultures. I am proud
to be part of this beautiful country we call Canada.
It is an honour and a privilege for me, as the new elected member
for Beauce, to second the motion on the address in reply to the Speech
from the Throne moved by the hon. member for Parkdale—High Park.
1635
[English]
Mr. Preston Manning (Leader of the Opposition, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to congratulate you on your re-election and
will do so more formally and thoroughly tomorrow.
I would also like to congratulate the members for Parkdale—High
Park and for Beauce on their excellent speeches. I think they
got the debate off on the right foot.
I now would like to move:
(On motion of Mr. Manning the debate was adjourned)
* * *
BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE
Hon. Don Boudria (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I believe you would find
unanimous consent for the following order:
That on Wednesday, September 24, 1997, the House shall continue to
sit until the leaders of all recognized parties have spoken in
the debate on the Address in Reply to the Speech from the Throne
and that immediately thereafter adjourn to the next sitting day.
(Motion agreed to)
Hon. Don Boudria (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons, Lib.) moved:
(Motion agreed to)
The Speaker: The House stands adjourned until tomorrow at
2 p.m. pursuant to Standing Order 24(1).
(The House adjourned at 4.36 p.m.)