CONTENTS
Monday, April 15, 1996
Mr. Mills (Red Deer) 1452
Mr. Hill (Prince George-Peace River) 1457
Mr. Gerry Byrne (Humber-St. Barbe-Baie Verte) 1461
Mr. Roy Cullen (Etobicoke North) 1461
Mr. Stéphane Dion (Saint-Laurent-Cartierville) 1461
Mr. Lawrence D. O'Brien (Labrador) 1461
Mr. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Papineau-Saint-Michel) 1461
Mr. Stéphan Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean) 1461
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1462
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1462
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1462
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1463
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1464
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1465
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 1468
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 1469
Motion for concurrence in 12th report 1470
Bill C-260. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed
adopted 1470
Bill C-261. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed
adopted 1470
Bill C-262. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed
adopted 1470
(Bill deemed read the second time and referredto a committee.) 1471
Consideration resumed of budget motion andamendment 1471
Mr. Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe) 1485
Amendment negatived on division: Yeas, 72;Nays, 123. 1497
Bill C-19. Consideration resumed of report stage 1498
(Motions Nos. 1 and 2 negatived.) 1498
Motion No. 3 negatived on division: Yeas, 37;Nays, 158 1498
Motion for concurrence 1499
Bill C-15. Consideration resumed of report stage andamendments
1499
Motion No. 1 agreed to on division: Yeas, 158;Nays, 37 1500
Motion No. 9 agreed to on division: Yeas, 158;Nays, 37 1500
Motion No. 4 agreed to on division: Yeas, 158;Nays, 37 1500
Motions Nos. 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 10 agreed to. 1500
Motion negatived on division: Yeas, 37; Nays, 158 1501
Motion for concurrence 1501
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 1501
Motion agreed to on division: Yeas, 123; Nays, 72 1501
Bill C-11. Consideration resumed of report stage 1502
Motion No. 1 negatived on division: Yeas, 30;Nays, 165 1502
(Motion No. 3 negatived.) 1503
(Motion No. 5 negatived.) 1503
Motion for concurrence 1503
Motion agreed to on division: Yeas, 123; Nays, 72 1504
1433
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Monday, April 15, 1996
The House met at 11 a.m.
_______________
Prayers
_____________________________________________
[
English]
The House resumed from March 18 consideration of the motion
that this House approves in general the budgetary policy of the
government and of the amendment.
Mr. Julian Reed (Halton-Peel, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I will be
dividing my time with the hon. member for Lanark-Carleton. It is
a privilege for me to speak to the 1996-1997 budget. If I can make
some small contribution to the debate-
An hon. member: It will be small.
Mr. Reed: My hon. friend from the Reform Party is alluding to
the fact that my contribution will be small, and I agree, but it will
be a contribution of some use.
I will dwell a little in the history of where we were, how we got
to be the way we are and where we may be going. It is necessary to
put this budget and previous budgets into of context to address the
financial situation of the country.
In my previous incarnation as a member of the provincial
legislative assembly in Ontario, I remember deficit budgeting in its
infancy. Every province was guilty of deficit budgeting, as was the
national government and virtually all governments in the western
world.
One of our senators has described that era as one of mutual
seduction, when it was a very popular thing to believe that money
came from government; that somehow or another there was an
infinite well which could do almost anything.
The political stripe of the government of the day really did not
matter. As was described, it was simply a case of mutual seduction.
(1105)
By the time the government changed in 1984 the national debt
had risen to $166 billion, over a period of 14 or 15 years. Then in
the following eight years the national debt climbed from
approximately $166 billion to $400 billion.
There was a realization during those years that this could not go
on indefinitely, that a halt had to be called, and yet there seemed to
be an absence of political courage to do something until we were on
the edge of precipitous financial situation not only in the country
itself but in each province. Every province has gone through the
same experience, as my colleagues will remember.
In 1993, when the Liberals came to power, there was a feeling of
frustration, a feeling of anger among the voting population and a
feeling that government was somehow incapable of getting hold of
the finances of the country. Expectations were low. It was a case of
whether this ship could be steered through rough waters to safe
harbour.
We were very fortunate to have the gentleman who is the finance
minister at the present time appointed to that position. I think it was
a cup that he might rather have passed by because the position of
finance minister in this country is very often the kiss of death
politically.
He set out on a course and he stated his course clearly at the
beginning. He would take the economy in two year short term
projections with a goal ultimately of getting rid of the deficit,
paying down the debt, and certainly beginning with that portion
which is held offshore.
It was a recipe that some people felt could not be achieved
because previous finance ministers had continuously failed to
achieve the targets they had set out. My honourable friends will
recall previous finance ministers as much as $10 billion off their
targets.
When our finance minister began this quest there was a lot of
scepticism that he would achieve it, but achieve it he did and
exceed it he did. Then he brought in the next budget, and achieve it
he did and exceed it he did.
Today we thankfully head down that path of reduced deficits. I
am not prone to quote other people's writings when addressing the
House but I think an article in the Ottawa Citizen from April 13 is
worth noting: ``The federal government appears to be sitting pretty
1434
on its deficit target for the fiscal year just ended. The finance
department said Friday the deficit for the first 11 months of the
year was $23.2 billion, down $4.6 billion from the same period in
the previous year. The finance minister set a deficit target of $32.7
billion for the year ending March 31, 1996''.
(1110 )
I know some of my friends in the Reform Party feel this target or
this goal is spread out too far. I can tell my hon. friends that had we
not done that, had we took the slash and burn direction the Reform
Party wanted we could have precipitated a recession of disastrous
proportions. It was a matter of walking the tightrope and balancing
the situation, moving toward the targets but at the same time not
throwing out the baby with the bath water.
What has that accomplished? There is a renewed confidence
from the international community in Canada today. Canada is now
poised for the greatest growth of all the G-7 countries. Sometimes
we tend to look inward too much and we do not look out to see
ourselves as other countries see us. It is useful to do that from time
to time. Then we can get a picture of where we stand in relation to
the people we trade with, to the people we compete with, to the
people who pay their taxes in their country, and so on.
In terms of taxation I know we all feel we are taxed excessively
in Canada. If we compare ourselves to other members of the G-7 it
is not exactly so. There are countries whose levels of taxation,
especially income tax, are even higher than those in Canada.
I would be the last person to suggest we should keep a high tax
regime and I will be one of the first people to recommend to the
hon. Minister of Finance that once the targets of zero deficit are
achieved and we begin to pay down the national debt that it reflect
in a sharing of that good fortune with the shrinking of taxation. The
freeing up of money will be one of the essentials for our future.
Now that we are at the point of a deficit of 3 per cent of the gross
domestic product, beginning with 5.7, it now means we are
approaching that point at which our growth rate is greater than our
deficit. That means the deficit can be paid down more quickly now
than it could initially. That ratio is very important. However, it is
important to remember that what we have tried to do is have a fair
and balanced approach to what we are doing, and I am sure we have
succeeded in the minds of most Canadians, although not in the
minds of everyone.
We have deliberately tried not to leave segments of society out in
the cold but we have tried at the same time to impose a balanced
responsibility on every citizen so that we are all sharing the load.
After all, we all created the load in the first place. For those of my
colleagues who are probably young enough to benefit from certain
kinds of government largess, we are now in a position where we
have to make it right.
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I appreciate
the spirit in which my hon. colleague has couched his remarks. He
is a fine gentleman but I surely take issue with some of his
comments.
(1115 )
The member talked about the seduction of governments which
led us to this debt. To me that is absolute nonsense. Every family,
every organizational group whether it be a church or community
organization and every business in this country knows that we have
to live within our means. They have done that for the last 25 years
while this and previous governments have sunk this country into an
enormous debt hole.
We talk about seduction. I think it is clear in the minds of
millions of Canadians that it was a simple buying of the Canadian
vote in election after election. That was the difficulty they had in
pulling away from that kind of overspending and government
waste.
We look at whether or not this government could have reached a
balanced budget far earlier but in fact it has not even set a date for
that. All we have to do is look at the provinces the hon. member
referred to. All have placed themselves on track for a balanced
budget. Provinces such as Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba
have reached the point where they are now in a position to debate
what they are to do with the surplus. They are deciding whether to
reduce taxes or to plug some leaks in some of their programs
through further expenditure of money and so on.
We are now approaching a debt of $600 billion. At the present
interest rate, it appears that our interest payment on that debt is
going to be somewhere near $50 billion a year.
I would like my hon. friend to address that issue. Can we deal
with a $50 billion interest payment per year and still protect our
social programs including our transfer payments to other
provinces?
Mr. Reed: Mr. Speaker, I would first like to respond to the
question of seduction since we are both here seducing each other. I
want to reinforce the fact that it was an era of mutual seduction. It
worked both ways. I will leave a little story with my hon. friend to
show an example of that.
In 1977 I ran in an election in Ontario. One of the issues my
party brought to the fore in no uncertain terms was the deficit in
Ontario at that time by the Tory government. We made speeches in
the House prior to the election being called on the subject of
government waste, excessive government spending, the largesse
that was going on hither and yon which was piling up and
accumulating the debt.
When we got into the election my leader hammered this message
out for the first couple of weeks until the premier was asked about
1435
the comments that were being made. He answered the reporters
with two words: ``Dr. No''. That was the end of it.
The Deputy Speaker: I am sorry to interrupt my friend. Time
has expired.
[Translation]
Unfortunately, there is no time left for the hon. member for
Bourassa to ask his question. Resuming debate.
[English]
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, it is a
pleasure to make some comments on the March 6 budget of the
government.
As I enter the House each day I like to look at some of the
Canadians who come to this place. I wonder what they are thinking
about when they come here. I wonder if they are as much in awe of
this place as I was when I came to the House, to think of the things
that happen in this place. I see young people, grade school children
who have come for a visit. I see some older children, parents and
grandparents. They are Canadians.
(1120)
Like every member of Parliament I would like to be sure when I
speak in this place, that no matter what the age might be of
Canadians who are listening to the speech in the gallery, they will
think that something good, productive or constructive was said.
From time to time statements are made in this place which are
more or less one sided. It makes me think of the cliché that if one is
not part of the solution, one must be part of the problem.
During the debate we have had on the budget there has been a lot
of talk about Canada's national debt which is about $600 billion. It
is not an amount which people are insensitive to. No one in this
place is insensitive to it. This amount was accumulated over the
last 25 years. It reflects the amount of money Canadians took out of
the system more than they put in. It is the amount of money we
contributed to improve the health care plan and social programs in
this country. In that accumulated sum, $350 billion of that is
benefits to Canadians.
Governments do not have money. Governments manage the
money of Canadians. That $350 billion has grown as a result of
interest and compound interest. The balance of that $550 billion to
$600 billion of national debt represents interest.
It is in our best interest-excuse the pun-to look at ways we
can get our fiscal house in order to not only bring the deficit down
but to eliminate it, the shortfall of revenue over expense every year.
We have to get to the position where we are creating a surplus so
that the surplus can be used to discharge that long term debt.
If Canada had a balance sheet in which all its assets and
liabilities were disclosed, we know the liability would be a long
term debt of some $600 billion. However, the Fraser Institute and
the United Nations have said that Canada is the second wealthiest
country in the world on a per capita basis. The reason they can say
that is that Canada has a wealth of assets.
According to the Fraser Institute, with our resources excluding
land value, Canada is worth about $3 trillion. There really is a
dowry or an equity in this country. The money we owe to foreigners
and other Canadians for the national debt is not just money that was
given away. It was invested in this country. It was invested in our
people, our youth, our health.
I see the health minister. I know Canada's health program is the
strongest element within Canadian society which holds the country
together. It creates the unity within this country and will keep the
country united. We have a strong health care system which we are
committed to. In good times as well as bad we will not compromise
the five principles of the Canada Health Act.
Confidence and stability are the principles which must be
reflected in budgets. I hope the people who come here and who
listen will feel that in recent years Canada has demonstrated a
stability within its affairs, that government has generated a level of
confidence, that the right things are happening.
When this government came to office the amount of deficit
represented something like 6 per cent of our GDP. The finance
minister in his first budget brought it down to 5 per cent of GDP. In
the next budget he brought it down to 4 per cent. In the current
fiscal year which ends on March 31, 1997, it will be down to 3 per
cent. The last time the finance minister addressed the issue of the
long term outlook for the deficit he said that in the subsequent year
it would be down to 2 per cent.
We are so very very close to delivering a balanced budget. It is
something we want to do and I do not think there is disagreement
on that. The only disagreement is over the velocity at which it
happens.
(1125 )
Some would suggest we have to balance the budget at all costs
regardless of the impact on seniors, regardless of the impact on
health care, regardless of the impact on jobs and youth. I do not
agree. Our budget has to be a compassionate budget. It has to be
responsive to the important needs of Canadians, and it has to be
done in a fair and equitable way. Are there spending
mismanagement or problems in a corporation? Of course there are.
In a government? Of course there are. There are always things we
can improve upon. We have to look for the things we have
improved upon.
I want to talk a little about the national debt because it is not in
isolation. There are assets and good things in this country which we
have not invested in. They will be with us and are for our children
in the long term.
1436
I say to all the young people: Canada is the best country in the
world, one of the richest countries in the world and it is going
to stay that way. Canadians have demonstrated that we have the
know how, that we can operate in a global economy, that we can
act responsibly and that we can work together in a proud,
generous, tolerant and prosperous nation. This is what makes the
United Nations look at Canada and say that is why we are the best
country in the world.
Seniors are a tremendous asset to Canada. They led us in bad
times through the depression. They led us through the war times.
They led us at times when we needed the help. The Prime Minister
has said on many occasions that we will never, never abandon
Canada's seniors.
In his speech on March 6 the finance minister said: ``We believe
that the right to a secure retirement should be available to all and
not become the preserve only of those who are well off''. That is an
important commitment.
The seniors are affected in this budget by the creation of what is
called a seniors benefit. It is a replacement for the current benefits
for seniors, including old age security, the guaranteed income
supplement and the age and pension income credits. It is a single
tax free benefit to begin in the year 2001.
Some of my constituents have asked why 2001. The important
aspect of that is it is going to take time to phase in and allow people
to arrange and manage their affairs so that when they do retire they
have had an adequate opportunity to make provisions for all their
needs.
The Prime Minister committed not to reduce the pensions of
today's seniors. The plan we have honours that commitment and
goes well beyond it. Canadians who were 60 years of age and over
on December 31, 1995 and their spouses whatever their age are
guaranteed to receive pensions amounting to no less than previous
entitlements. That means they are going to have an opportunity to
either stay under the existing plan or go under the new seniors
benefits. That is being sensitive to seniors. Many will receive more
under the new plan. GIS recipients will receive $120 more a year
and seniors will be able to choose the benefit that maximizes their
pension.
Most future seniors will also be better off because the new
system targets higher benefits for those with lower incomes.
Seventy-five per cent of single seniors and couples will receive the
same or higher benefits and nine out of ten single senior women
will be better off.
The seniors benefits will be fully indexed to inflation and will
treat senior couples equally through separate equal cheques for
each spouse.
There are so many good things about the budget I would like to
talk about but my time is coming to a close. To finish, I would like
to say a little word to the family. I spoke on Bill C-10 not too long
ago. During that speech I said that if the family is strong, the deficit
will be gone. I urge my colleagues to work with me to consider
ways in which we can improve the tax status of families that stay
together and stop worrying about the tax benefits for those who
decide not to stay together.
[Translation]
Mr. Osvaldo Nunez (Bourassa, BQ): Mr. Speaker, both my
hon. colleague and the speaker before him have stated that
eliminating the deficit is one of this government's priorities. I
agree. But I cannot, unfortunately, agree with the procedure, the
mechanisms and the means used to accomplish this.
(1130)
To me, the social costs of eliminating the deficit are
unacceptable: 45,000 public servants laid off, cuts made to social
programs, including health and pensions. Having said earlier that
you believed that seniors represented an important segment of our
society, why are you making more cuts?
The most unacceptable are the cuts to unemployment insurance.
There is a $5 billion surplus, and this is not tax money, but
contributions by workers and employers. How can there be any
justification for using this money, which belongs to businesses and
their workers, to eliminate the deficit? Does this not pose a
problem of ethics and legitimacy? Does this not represent a
misappropriation of funds which have been put in place by
legislation not to solve a deficit problem but to provide benefits to
the unemployed? That is my question.
[English]
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
understand the member's comments and his preamble. He really
got down to employment insurance reforms.
The word insurance has not been operative in the past. It is an
insurance plan. That means premiums should be paid into the
program by all who participate in the plan and be sufficient to cover
the benefits paid out. It has not happened in the past. It is not
sustainable for the future. Change is necessary.
The member is part of the problem, not part of the solution. I
would like to hear from him how the system might be improved so
that it will be an insurance system which is not a burden on
Canadians who do not draw on the plan. We all participate and
support the plan. My wish is that the one million unemployed
Canadians will get jobs and never, ever have to use employment
insurance benefits.
Mr. Leon E. Benoit (Vegreville, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, appreciate
the awe that the member and all Canadians feel for this place.
However, what governments have done and the irresponsibility
they have shown in handling taxpayers' money causes me to feel
disdain for this place.
1437
Governments have been totally irresponsible. Finance ministers
since the early 1970s have said that they realized that the deficit
must be dealt with. John Turner in 1975 said: ``I come now to
specific measures. None is more important than the control of
public expenditures''.
When the Prime Minister was finance minister in 1978 he said:
``Significant reductions in deficits can be expected''. They did not
happen. Many previous finance ministers promised to deal with the
problem of overspending. It did not happened. Canadians cannot
feel awe for this place with these kinds of actions on the part of
governments when dealing with taxpayers' money.
The member also spoke about the trillions of dollars in assets
that Canada has. That kind of thinking is terribly upsetting to me.
In Mexico assets meant very little when it did not deal with its
overspending problem. The United States took over its oil reserves
for the next number of years because Mexico needed the money.
The United States along with other countries through the
International Monetary Fund provided the money.
This finance minister, with the ever growing interest payments
on the debt increasing to $50 billion, has not dealt with the
problem.
The Deputy Speaker: I think the member has received a
question. Briefly please, he has about one minute.
Mr. Szabo: Mr. Speaker, I repeat, there are people who are part
of the solution and people who are part of the problem.
We can spend all day long talking about history. We are here to
talk about the future of these young people, the future of the
working people today and the future of our seniors. We have to take
positive steps. Now is the time to start. I ask the member to join the
rest of the members in this place to start looking toward the future
rather than lamenting the past.
(1135)
[Translation]
Mr. Benoît Sauvageau (Terrebonne, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I will
be speaking today on the budget, if my Liberal colleagues will give
me the chance. There is a place where people may discuss
respectfully.
Therefore, with the opportunity afforded me, I would like to
show that the 1996 budget does not represent, as they like to say,
any additional savings, that it really does not add anything new and
that it represents the end of the plan to put the country's finances in
order. In this budget, the minister is not cutting expenditures and
this year's deficit at all. On the contrary, there is in fact an increase
in expenditures of $104 million.
The Minister of Finance is demonstrating the government's
indifference. It is as if there was no waste, no duplication and no
tax inequity. It is all forgotten; out of sight out of mind.
The government is dumping $7 billion of its 1996-97 and
1997-98 deficit on the provinces. Furthermore, it artificially
reduced the deficit by taking the $5 billion surplus from the
unemployment insurance account, which is funded entirely by
contributions from companies and individuals. It is unacceptable to
see the burden of the social programs left to the provinces and to
those who forced to depend on them. In matters of employment, the
government is deceiving the people, and particularly young people.
It claims to be creating jobs and improving the economy, but
clearly its measures are either inadequate or totally ineffective.
The Minister of Finance cut funding to student job programs by
$26 million over the past two years. And then, all of a sudden,
perhaps because of an election year or an election on the horizon,
he changes direction. He doubles to $120 million the amount of aid
to student programs-an increase of $60 million. Nevertheless, the
government is hitting young people by cutting funding to
post-secondary education.
The government will reduce funding by $150 million in 1996-97
and by between $400 million and $500 million in 1997-98. This
will inevitably lead to an increase in education costs, hence the
demonstrations by young people and university students in recent
months and years against these draconian cuts. In the end, the
students will be the ones paying.
For more than two years now, the Bloc has been calling for an
investment fund to promote defence conversion. The Liberals
promised $200 million per year over five years starting with 1994,
for a total of $1 billion. They made this commitment in the red
book and during the election campaign. As is too often the case,
this promise was then forgotten. The Minister of Finance is
proposing $150 million in 1996-97 and maybe $200 million in
1997-98. We would not be surprised if the $200 million figure was
revised downward, as is too often the case.
Furthermore, for two years, the Bloc Quebecois has been calling
for a major reform of the business tax system. The government has
come forward with the proposal to set up a committee made of tax
experts, several of whom would come from businesses already
benefiting from tax shelters. We, in the Bloc Quebecois, joked that
this was like choosing members of the Hell's Angels because they
know how organized crime operates.
It seems obvious that the only purpose of such a committee is to
ward off criticism and to pretend to examine the issue. We can
already anticipate the conclusions of this committee. They will not
contribute anything new. In any case, the members of this inner
circle are both judges and judged. We, in the Bloc Quebecois, want
fair and equitable reform. To this end, we have been asking since
we came to Ottawa for a parliamentary committee to analyze
federal policies concerning business taxation.
1438
Regarding these same subsidies to businesses, last year the
government substantially reduced assistance to the dairy industry,
which is mainly concentrated in Quebec. This year, it is simply
abolishing it altogether.
(1140)
Is the Minister of Finance really aware of the negative impact
this measure would have on Quebec agricultural and dairy
producers? We already know the answer is no. Does he know that
these cuts are excessively dangerous, that Quebec is still the federal
government's poor relation? Recently, civil servants who had
nothing better to do got this great idea, they would go after raw
milk cheese. They had a brainstorm over the Easter break. It would
give them something to do. They said to themselves: Let us throw
another monkey wrench in there. More often than not, the
agricultural sector is the one that has to pay.
The Bloc Quebecois demands that the government get its fiscal
house in order by seing to it that those who do not pay their fair
share do so.
Mr. Speaker, I must ask you if this is a questions and comments
period. If not, I would ask my colleague to please be patient a few
minutes before making his clever comments.
When will the government act in a real fair and responsible
manner? We have now been waiting for two and a half years.
Last year, unpaid taxes amounted to $6 billion and the
government was not even able to do better than the year before.
There are lots of funds that the government could recover. But
because of its ineptitude, its incompetence, the government too
often does nothing at all.
The last estimate of the finance department shows that, as far as
business taxes are concerned, the government forgoes nearly $10
billion. When will members of Parliament undertake a thorough
review of business taxation? Before anything else, the government
must put an end to that type of evasion, that tax dodging.
Part of the deficit reduction is due to the country's economic
situation, which is relatively good, not because of the Liberals, but
because all G-7 countries are currently enjoying a good situation.
Undeniably, the government is making political hay with this. It
is true that exportations are high, interest rates are low and
unemployment insurance premiums are higher than payments.
However, if the economic context was to change, either because of
higher interest rates or a stronger pressure on the unemployment
insurance system, the impact would be immediate and catastrophic
for public finances. I am convinced we would then see a major
change in the Liberal government's attitude.
I am a member of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs
and International Trade. As such, I would like to stress that we will
have to examine what seems to be the main problem of new
exporters, that is financing, whether it is easy to obtain financing.
Above all, we will have to establish parameters in order to facilitate
access to foreign markets for small and medium size businesses.
According to what he said on page 78 of his Budget Plan, the
finance minister seems to be aware of that problem. I would like to
know how much of the $50 million injected into the Business
Development Bank and the $50 million added to the working
capital of the EDC, will go directly and through concrete measures
to small and medium size enterprises trying to export?
Government must recognize that Canada is made up of regional
markets: atlantic, Quebec, Ontario, the prairies and British
Columbia, which are separately integrated into larger trade and
economic continental entities. For British Columbia, the northwest
United States and the Asia-Pacific area are natural markets.
For Quebec it is another matter altogether. Its favoured markets
are North America, 80 per cent of its exports, and Europe, 12 per
cent. We should note that for Quebec European markets are three
times as important as Asian markets. It is up to individual
companies, and not the federal government, to determine, on the
basis of their strengths and the nature of their productions, what
their export targets should be.
The federal government should limit itself to providing support.
Again the priority in the area of assistance to exporting companies
should be a better access to financing.
I would like to stress that we believe Quebec and Canada have
lost something when they renegotiated the agreement on lumber
with the United States. The fact that we agreed to reopen an
agreement already in force will probably serve as a precedent for
the United States, which will demand the same in other disputes
with Canada.
To conclude, I would like to quote an article by Jean-Robert
Sansfaçon, published in Le Devoir on Thursday, March 7: ``While
Ottawa continues to pretend that it reduced the deficit by cutting
expenditures from $120 billion in 1993-94 to $106 billion in
1997-98, a more thorough analysis shows that at least 5 of these
$14 billion come from a normal reduction in the number of
unemployment recipients due to economic growth, and another $6
billion come from cuts in transfers to the provinces for health,
social assistance and post-secondary education. We know that a
new recession would make the unemployment insurance fund
surplus melt like new snow and, therefore, increase the budget
deficit of the government. Like last year, the victims of this budget
are the provinces, especially provinces like Quebec''.
1439
(1145)
This is the reality: The federal government is not assuming its
responsibilities, it is transferring to the provinces the burden of
making most of the cuts called for in this budget.
Mr. Ronald J. Duhamel (St. Boniface, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
listened carefully to the speech of my colleague. I wanted to make
two or three brief comments and ask a question.
After this budget was brought down, I looked carefully at the
comments made by influential people within the country, that is,
business people, men and women who work within the major
unions and journalists. The great majority of them had positive
comments to make. I am extremely surprised that my colleague
was unable, unless I misunderstood him, to put greater emphasis on
a number of things that are well accepted, well thought of and that
are helping. I believe he mostly emphasized what he thought were
the negative aspects.
Perhaps my colleague would be willing to respond to this. Why
did he not mention any positive aspects in his speech, when we
consider all the positive comments that were made?
Mr. Sauvageau: Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to respond to the
comments made by my hon. colleague. Simply because it is
difficult. Regarding the quality of the French used in the budget,
the nice rhetoric used to hide the drastic cuts imposed on the people
of Quebec and Canada, I could indeed admit that it is well written.
It is written so that transfer payments to the provinces can be cut by
$7 billion. At first glance, it almost appears to be well written and
appealing.
However, if we look at it more closely, as Jean-Robert Sansfaçon
did in the March 7 edition of Le Devoir and as several other
analysts and columnists did as well, if we look at the figures
instead of the quality of the French used in the budget, how can I
praise the government for cutting transfer payments to the
provinces by $7 billion over two years? How can I praise the
potential increase in tuition fees for students in Quebec and the rest
of Canada? How can I praise the government for cutting transfer
payments while maintaining national standards? How can I praise
the government for cutting transfer payments for health care? How
can I praise the government for practically robbing the UI fund of
$5 billion?
That is why I would rather comment on cuts, on the
government's inaction, instead of praising the quality of the French
used to try to hide cuts from the people of Canada and Quebec.
[English]
Mr. Leon E. Benoit (Vegreville, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
congratulate the speaker on his comments concerning the fact that
this Liberal government is passing the spending cuts on to the
provinces.
All the cuts that the finance minister has passed on to the
provinces still are not enough. Would the member comment on
why he might think that the Liberals have not done the job in terms
of cutting spending?
(1150)
[Translation]
Mr. Sauvageau: Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to answer the
question put by the hon. member from the Reform Party. In my
opinion, the Liberals have not done their job as far as cuts are
concerned, they dumped it all on the provinces because it always
looks better to have cuts done by a neighbour rather than doing
them yourself.
The Liberals were also negligent because, if I am not mistaken,
they were offered the possibility of a parliamentary committee to
determine priorities regarding corporate tax cuts-you did so
yourself.
But they simply refused because it was easier to say: ``We will
keep our money, but we will impose cuts on those who put money
in our wallet, namely the provinces with their taxes''. Why did the
Liberals neglect their job? Simply because they wanted to make the
provinces responsible for the cuts and make them out to be the bad
guys. It is as simple as that.
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member for Lac-Saint-Jean.
Mr. Claude Bachand (Saint-Jean, BQ): Saint-Jean, Mr.
Speaker, not Lac-Saint-Jean. The hon. member for Lac-Saint-Jean
will be joining us at 2 p.m. this afternoon, and we are very proud
that he is doing so.
First of all I would like to reassure our friends opposite by saying
that, while the budget may contain very few good news, and there
is no doubt that there are few, they must not forget either that it is
the role of the opposition to assess the budgets brought down by
government.
Very seldom does a budget earn government praise for the
outstanding job it has done in preparing the budget. In my opinion,
it would not exactly be the place of the opposition to say so. We are
here, in this democratic system, to point out those budget items that
we totally disagree with and to suggest amendments, so that
democracy can prevail.
I think that, should this House become Liberal through and
through, Canada would be next to impossible to live in. It seemed
noteworthy to me. In fact, I have a few points to raise, which are
not exactly positive either. I think that raising negative points in
assessing a budget is good for democracy and something that must
be done.
1440
The budget can be considered from two points of view. There
is what I call the macroeconomic view and the microeconomic
view. I often look at what impact the budget will have on the
people of my riding. That is what I would like to share with you
today. I will not be telling you anything you do not know already
by saying that the riding of Saint-Jean has always been, in my
words, a disaster area. We will recall that, with its very first
budget, this government closed down the Collège militaire in
Saint-Jean. This keeps going on. The hon. member for Terrebonne
mentioned a few similar points.
Let me tell you about the issue of milk subsidies, which is very
important in my riding, where there are many milk producers.
These people will be faced with a 15 per cent cut in their subsidy.
This amounts to an annual dead loss of about $1 million for the
riding of Saint-Jean. There will be $1 million less in Saint-Jean's
economy, in addition to the $32 million loss suffered with the
closure of the military college. And all this will keep going on,
because the milk subsidy reduction is not just a one time cut: it will
be implemented over a number of years until there is no subsidy
left.
Therefore, the riding of Saint-Jean will not just lose $1 million
this year: it will lose $1 million this year, next year, the year after,
and so on until there is no subsidy left. This will result in a $4 to $5
million cut for the riding of Saint-Jean, without compensation.
Once again, there is a double standard.
The government says that it will put an end to the Crow benefit
in western Canada. Of course, this measure will have an impact on
producers, who are told that they will get $2 billion to make the
necessary transition, diversify their economy, etc. However, no
such assistance is provided in the riding of Saint-Jean and in
Quebec, among others, who is the primary milk producer in Canada
with 40 per cent of the country's milk production. Once again,
Quebec is being targeted and more specifically the riding of
Saint-Jean.
The military college is not the only institution to be closed. This
year, it was announced that Saint-Jean's employment centre would
also be closed. Thirty second and third line employees from the
employment centre are to be redeployed throughout the Montérégie
region and will have to move. These people are wondering whether
they will follow their jobs. They are wondering whether they will
move to Saint-Hubert or Longueuil.
In the meantime, industries and the jobless go to the Saint-Jean
employment centre where there is only first line staff to take note
of their plight and concerns. However, when the time comes to
follow up on these cases, the employees are no longer there.
(1155)
The second and third lines of service have gone somewhere else
in the Montérégie area. This is utterly deplorable. We could
understand it if the unemployment insurance account were in
deficit. We could understand even more if the government were
contributing to the unemployment insurance account, but this is not
the case, in either instance. The government is not contributing to
the account, and the account is showing a $5 billion surplus every
year. Not only was there a $5 billion surplus this year, there will be
one next year also with the new proposed measures. They want to
dip even deeper into that account, not to take care of the
unemployed but to help wipe out the government deficit.
In Saint-Jean, an area still facing closures, it is hard to
accept-and this is an acid criticism levelled at the
government-that it could say: ``Listen, we have to cut
unemployment insurance; we know that you need it, but
unemployed people will get better benefits''. Yet, just the opposite
is happening.
The customs office in Saint-Jean is closing down. There were
two customs officers. The Saint-Jean office was the oldest inland
customs office in Canada, but it just closed down. The industries in
Saint-Jean that are experiencing difficulties in matters of customs
clearance have been told: ``Listen, we will do it by computer. Also,
you will send your files to the officers in the Lacolle customs
office, who will come if there are are problems''.
In that regard, I can tell you that all the industries in the riding of
Saint-Jean are opposing this measure. The area is like a sieve, in
any case. The Richelieu River flows by the city of Saint-Jean. In
Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Carmel, we have a customs office on a
wharf that extends 300 or 400 feet into the river, which is about one
mile wide. I am convinced smugglers go by on the other side of the
river. All the customs officer can do is call in the RCMP. But the
RCMP has not been spared by the cuts, and it takes a few hours
before it starts going after the smugglers. So, anybody can go
through. The government loses large amounts of money customs
could collect. That is just another disaster for Saint-Jean.
Saint-Jean is once again under fire, and the customs office there
was closed down.
The Fonds de solidarité and the CSN Fondaction, which is just
starting out, are also under attack. The minister told us these funds
have proved their value, and they no longer need the same level of
incentive. Let me remind the minister that the CSN Fondaction is
just starting out and that the Fonds de solidarité is the pride not
only of Saint-Jean, but of Quebec as a whole.
The Fonds de solidarité, the CSN Fondaction, and the Caisse de
dépôt are all part of the distinctiveness of the Quebec society. That
is what the distinct society is all about. We should not keep trying
to water down its meaning, and try to replace it with the concept of
principal homeland of the French language, which is the new
buzzword.
I am sorry, but the distinct society has always been a reality, and
it means what it says. Concerning these funds, I feel it is important
to point out that they are a feature of the distinct society. They are a
way to handle the economy in Quebec which is clearly distinct and
different from what is going on in the rest of Canada. It thought it
was important to mention it in passing because it was sheer
nonsense for the Quebec Liberal Party to say, during the week-end:
1441
``We will no longer talk about a distinct society''. For now, we will
talk about a cultural homeland and, next year, if English Canada
still has a problem with that, we will just use the expression
homeland. And then, we will water it down until there is nothing
left. Let me say that the Bloc Quebecois will closely watch how
things evolve on this issue and will oppose any such proposal.
On the last point, Mr. Speaker, I beg your indulgence.
[English]
Mr. Speaker, I will speak to you in English because I am taking
some courses in English at the language school base militaire in
Saint-Jean. They say my English has improved. I have a very nice
teacher, Brenda Hunter. She told me that if I want to follow these
courses next year I had better say a few words in English in the
House, not reading but expressing myself without any notes.
I decided that for the last part I would denounce the measures in
the budget concerning the language school in Saint-Jean. Earlier
there were almost 150 teachers in Saint-Jean and nowadays there
are around 75. The numbers are falling. The Department of
National Defence is trying to extinguish the language school in
Saint-Jean and we do not know why.
(1200 )
Why are more people not coming to Saint-Jean to take these
courses? We have a most modern laboratory and some very
competent and knowledgeable teachers who do a great job. That is
why I have to say once again that it is a scandal to try and close
down a very important and very effective institution like the one in
Saint-Jean.
Mr. Speaker, I think you will agree that my first words of English
in the House were not too bad.
[Translation]
Finally, we consider this budget to be totally unacceptable. I feel
that I have been fully mandated by the constituents from Saint-Jean
to vote against this budget, but my colleagues across the way need
not be afraid since we have come up with some positive
amendments. That is what I call democracy.
I will, of course, be very pleased to vote in favour of the
amendment put forward by the Bloc Quebecois in order to make
the changes needed in the budget. I hope my colleagues opposite
will support this very important amendment. If not, they will have
to understand that the constituents in my riding have mandated me
to vote against this year's Liberal budget.
[English]
Mrs. Rose-Marie Ur (Lambton-Middlesex, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I will be sharing my time with my hon. colleague from
Winnipeg North.
I am pleased to take part in the debate on the government's third
budget, one which gives credence to the three main goals of the
agenda since it was elected: job creation, economic growth and
deficit reduction.
First, I would like to commend the Minister of Finance for
respecting the will of the voters which was clearly expressed
regarding taxation. Canadians did not want a tax hike because they
believe they are already paying their fair share of taxes.
Given the delicate state of the Canadian economy at the present
time, the federal government could have opted for harsher
measures. In fact, some provincial governments such as the present
Ontario government have chosen this path which I believe does
nothing but increase the economic problems we face.
The Liberal government rejects any solutions based on narrow
minded ideologies. Instead, the guiding principle to making the
changes that have to be made are based on pragmatism and fairness
to all levels of society. As an example, the Canadian health and
social transfer will be characterized by secure and stable funding
over the next five years.
It is important to remember that the government will legislate a
floor to provide a sound guarantee that cash transfers will never fall
below the $11 billion mark at any time during the five-year period.
This guarantee demonstrates the Liberal government's strong
commitment to secure Canada's health system, social safety net
and to build a renewed social and economic union.
The government recognizes that Canada is a rich country, rich in
natural resources and its people. It also recognizes that it is the
government's responsibility to create opportunities for present and
future Canadians and that is what it has done. The challenges that
face our youth are clear. The youth unemployment rate is roughly
double the national average. Approximately 45 per cent of the new
jobs created between the years 1990 and the year 2000 will require
more than 16 years of training and education.
This budget provides an additional $165 million over three years
to help students and their families deal with the increased costs of
education. This will be done through increased education tax
credits and an increased limit on parents' contributions through
their children's registered education savings plan. Eligibility for
the child care expense allowance has been broadened to help more
parents undertake education or retraining.
Funding for summer student jobs has been doubled. An
additional $315 million over three years will be provided in
addition to the
1442
existing fund to create new youth employment opportunities. We
are committed to a new domestic Team Canada style partnership
between businesses and governments to create entry level jobs for
Canada's youth.
(1205 )
Canadians know direct job creation must come from the private
sector, but it is incumbent on the government to make sure the
economic context is the best possible and favours the continuous
economic growth necessary for job creation.
Deficit control requires, among other things, that inflation is
kept low. This contributes to reducing pressures on interest rates
and helps control the other costs of doing business. It makes
Canada more competitive in foreign markets.
We can also see dividends from the ability to control the deficit
and inflation. Short term interest rates have diminished by three
percentage points since last year's budget. This means a saving of
$2,400 a year on $100,000 mortgage. Increased competitiveness
means a strong increase in exports with a record export surplus of
$28 billion.
Canada's trade performance in recent years has been remarkable.
Exports have soared. The Team Canada approach has proven to be
a major success with $20 billion in new business deals resulting
from three major trade missions led by the Prime Minister to Asia
and Latin America. We all know exports are vital to job creation in
Canada. Every billion dollars in exports sustains 11,000 to 12,000
new jobs. Continued progress begins with further fiscal
improvement and the 1996 budget delivers.
The steps proposed in the March 6 budget consolidate and
extend the first two budgets and further contribute to the economic
and financial objectives. The government is maintaining its focus
on reducing program spending because the debt is a problem
created by government and the solution has to focus primarily in
our own backyard. That is why of the fiscal actions taken from
1994-95 to 1998-99, a full 87 per cent have been through
expenditure savings. Together the three budgets will contribute
$26.1 billion in savings for 1997-98.
However, the 1996 budget goes beyond the bottom line
calculations. As Liberals we know that financial reform must never
be an end in itself. The steps taken to get our fiscal House in order
are a means to an end. What is the end? It is lower interest rates,
better job growth and the maintenance of cherished social
programs. These steps are a means to ensure the Canada that all
Canadians want can be preserved.
Many seniors have asked us to address their concerns about
security for their grandchildren and security for themselves. I am
pleased to see a new tax free benefit for seniors that will replace the
old OAS and the GIS benefits and will ensure the long term
stability and sustainability for seniors' pensions. These proposed
improvements to seniors' benefits reflect what the great majority
of my constituents in Lambton-Middlesex have been asking for,
as indicated in a survey I conducted last November.
The seniors benefits will help those who need it most while
streamlining the program. It will make the system fair. It will
guarantee that all current seniors, in fact those who are 60 years of
age now, and their spouses will receive no less than the current
pension benefits. Most seniors will receive the same or more
money under the proposed new system.
I am very pleased the Minister of Finance made a decision not to
allow charter banks to sell insurance from branches. This issue was
a major concern to my constituents. Keeping the status quo means
that Canadians will continue to have many choices depending on
where they live and what their particular needs are.
As the member for Lambton-Middlesex, I look forward to
working with my colleagues to help implement the government's
commitment to bettering the lives of rural Canadians, a
commitment that was renewed in the February 27 throne speech.
This year's budget will build on this foundation through a number
of initiatives to provide for economic growth and new
opportunities for the agri-food sector.
For example, the government will create a single food inspection
agency to be responsible for all federally mandated quarantine and
inspection services. This initiative will reduce overlap and
duplication by consolidating resources now in the three federal
departments of agriculture and agri-food, health and fisheries and
oceans, and will lead to an annual savings of approximately $44
million starting in 1998-99.
While phasing out the remaining dairy subsidies starting August
1, 1997, the government has made a commitment to supply
management as part of a long term dairy policy intended to
maintain a strong and viable Canadian dairy industry. This will
include a strong defence of Canada's position in the NAFTA
dispute settlement process. We are also committed to finalizing
arrangements with the provinces for cost shared safety nets,
including a whole farm income stabilization program, currently
NISA, crop insurance and province specific companion programs.
(1210)
Another major announcement of the March 1996 budget was the
decision by the government to sell its fleet of 13,000 grain hopper
cars. It is extremely important that the terms and conditions of the
sale are established for the maximum benefit of Canada's farming
community. As stated in the budget, the federal government will
consider all proposals put forward for the acquisition of the cars.
1443
In a country as diverse as ours, it is a real privilege for all of
us to be able to be part of a team that sets objectives and goals,
and meets them. We do not just talk about them. We meet them.
We have set the challenges for the years to come. Through the
Minister of Finance and all who are involved in the process, we
will continue to meet each and every one of these challenges.
Mr. Elwin Hermanson (Kindersley-Lloydminster, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, I have a short question. The member for
Lambton-Middlesex talked about the sale of 13,000 hopper cars,
which is an extremely important issue in my riding and in my area.
Most of the time, when one wants to buy a used product such as a
car, one goes to the lot and asks the sales person what the price is.
He or she will say that the price of the car is $5,000, $3,000 or
$10,000.
In the case of the producer coalition which wants to buy the
13,000 hopper cars, the Minister of Finance or Treasury Board or
the Minister of Transport or whoever is responsible will not tell the
farmers what is the asking price for the cars.
Does she really think it is fair to ask producers to come up with a
proposal to buy the cars when they are not told what is the asking
price for those cars? They have not been given the details of how
those cars will be administered and allocated after they have been
purchased.
Mrs. Ur: Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the question. This is
certainly a concern that was expressed to me in my riding while we
were home for the Easter break.
The government is proposing to meet with all concerned parties.
We have to understand that these hopper cars were bought by
taxpayers' money Canada-wide. It is very important how the
consultation process goes with the producers as well as with the
Minister of Finance, with the minister of agriculture. It is not just
the west but it is the east as well that has to share in the burden of
this.
I have seen allocations that perhaps the cars are worth $300,000
or $400,000. In due time when these people sit down and negotiate
terms of where the hopper cars are going to be sold, it will solve
itself.
It is all well and good for farmers or commodity groups to bid on
these. We have to work collectively on this. There is not much
point in owning hopper cars if we are not compatible with the
railway system.
Mr. Rey D. Pagtakhan (Parliamentary Secretary to Prime
Minister, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to speak today on the
1996 budget which was tabled in Parliament March 6.
It reflects the priorities of the government. It ensures that the
need to be more frugal will never come before the need to be more
compassionate and fair. It strikes a delicate balance between fiscal
reality and social responsibility.
The government has met its deficit reduction targets and is on its
way to surpassing them without raising taxes. At the same time, it
is protecting and preserving our valued social programs like
medicare and pension programs for seniors.
These twin goals have been achieved through good governance.
The response from the Canadian public has been positive. The day
after the budget was delivered last month, newspapers across the
country carried headlines expressing optimism and support.
In my home town, the Winnipeg Free Press gave the finance
minister high marks for meeting his deficit projections. ``Too many
finance ministers before him have promised honey and delivered
vinegar''.
This achievement in fiscal responsibility and stability has
contributed to Canada's strong economic performance and
therefore job creation. Since 1993, when the Liberals took office,
nearly 600,000 jobs have been created nationwide.
In addition, the merchandise trade surplus has increased and
short term interest rates have decreased, decreasing the amount of
mortgage payments which citizens have to pay. Inflation has fallen
sharply. All of these have boosted investor confidence in Canada.
(1215)
The deficit targets of 3 per cent of GDP for 1996-97 and 2 per
cent for 1997-98 will be achieved. In 1997-98 the financial
requirements of government will fall to $6 billion or about 0.7 per
cent of GDP, making it the lowest since 1969 and the lowest of any
central government in the G-7 countries.
All of these achievements will translate into job creation, which
remains the number one priority of the government. I am pleased
that we have created over half a million jobs since 1993. However,
we know this is not enough and that is why our efforts of job
creation remain our overwhelming commitment.
Budgeting is more than putting our fiscal house in order and
more than deficit reduction. It is more than balancing our revenues
and expenditures. Financial stewardship is only a tool to the
primary purpose of government which is to serve citizens.
Canadians value our nation's social programs. We worry when
we hear of hospital closures, cuts to education funding and
reductions to social assistance for the less fortunate in society.
Canadians wonder how universal medicare, access to
post-secondary education and social assistance can be sustained
given all the pressures on our system.
Therefore in order to ease the mind of citizens and to reaffirm
the government's commitment to health, education and social
assistance, the 1996 budget provides the stability and subsequent
growth to its transfers to the provinces by legislating a new
1444
five-year funding arrangement for the Canada health and social
transfer program beginning in 1998-99.
Entitlements over this period will grow from $25.1 billion to
approximately $27.4 billion. More important, there will be a new
cash floor for transfers of at least $11.1 billion in all years
thereafter. This will give the federal government the leverage to
maintain our valued social programs.
For the province of Manitoba, where I come from, the major
transfers in terms of the Canada health and social transfer and the
equalization payments which later on will replace the established
programs financing will exceed $2 billion in 1996-97 and are
expected to total roughly $1,875 per person in 1995-96, about 48
per cent of the national average. We see there is a significant
transfer of money from the federal government to the province of
Manitoba.
Just for comparison, per capita Manitoba will be getting less
than Newfoundland, P.E.I., Nova Scotia and New Brunswick but it
will be getting more than Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta
and B.C.
That defines for us the character of our nation: those who have
more share with those who have less. It also defines our Canadian
identity.
Secure and growing funding for our transfer program will ensure
the federal government's capacity to uphold the five principles of
medicare: universality, portability, accessibility, non-private,
public administration, and comprehensiveness; as well, the
principle that no residency requirement can be imposed on social
assistance recipients who move from one province to another.
These measures will enable the government to keep its deficit
reduction targets while protecting the future of our social
programs. This type of balanced approach tells us how the
government is very fiscally realistic and at the same time very
socially responsible.
(1220)
Canada currently spends approximately 10 per cent of GDP on
health care. Other nations spend more but do not provide universal
access to their citizens. Indeed we are fortunate in Canada. We
enjoy universal access. It is one of the most envied health care
systems in the world. However, we realize we must do all we can to
protect our system. We must ensure that each and every health care
dollars is spent wisely.
To this end we would like to know in which new technologies
and techniques to invest, which old ones to retain or abandon and
how to organize health services to get the maximum benefit from
available resources. This is our commitment. Because of this the
budget has allocated health services research funds to the tune of
$65 million.
As well, the budget has increased assistance to those in need
with the new child support taxation measures to benefit our
children, the future of our nation. We have not forgotten our
seniors. We are committed to introducing a new seniors benefit
program that will ensure sustainability by targeting those who need
assistance most without affecting the benefits received by current
seniors.
The government cannot do it alone. That is why the government
has challenged the private sector. We know that a measure of
success in any country is when citizens try their own initiatives and
at the same time commit and challenge themselves in the service of
the country.
Imagine a country that is number one in which to live, according
to the United Nations. Imagine a country where interest rates have
decreased over 300 bases points since early 1995, a country where
deficit targets have consistently decreased from 6 per cent, to 5 per
cent, to 3 per cent and to 2 per cent until the budget is balanced.
Imagine a country where financial requirements will fall to $6
billion or .7 per cent of the GDP from $30 billion or 4.2 per cent in
1993-94, the lowest since 1969 and the lowest in any central
government of the G-7 countries. Imagine when the drop in
program spending has been dramatic, from 16.8 per cent to 12 per
cent. That country is Canada and budget '96 reflects the soul of this
country.
[Translation]
Mr. Osvaldo Nunez (Bourassa, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my hon.
colleague mentioned that job creation is a priority for this
government. I think that this government has failed miserably as
far as job creation is concerned.
These last few weeks, I have worked on the issue of the closing,
in Sainte-Thérèse, Quebec, of the plant operated by Kenworth, an
American firm. More than 800 workers stand to lose their jobs and
more than 800 Sainte-Thérèse families will be affected. This is
utterly tragic for these families which are faced with a very limited
future.
I say to my hon. colleague that, true, jobs have been created, but
tens and hundreds of thousands of others have been lost. The jobs
that are created are precarious, temporary and poorly paid. These
days, business executives specialize in laying off their employees.
The more they lay off, the more efficient they are.
In the federal Department of Citizenship and Immigration,
immigrants complain that they can no longer meet a public servant
or talk with one on the telelphone, that their calls are always
answered by machines. They do not get answers to their problems.
1445
(1225)
I would like to ask my colleague what concrete job creation
initiatives are found in this budget, apart from the creation of a few
summer jobs for students?
[English]
Mr. Pagtakhan: Mr. Speaker, it is indeed sad that downsizing
has to happen but it is an essential component of good governance.
It is indeed sad that some jobs have been lost, but at the same
time we have the new economy. Therefore we have to adjust our
country and our citizenry to that new economy. We must realize
that when we have created over half a million jobs, and I hope the
member would agree with me, that some who have been laid off in
their previous jobs would have found new jobs among the new jobs
created. This is the reality of our times.
In terms of specific projects, the summer student program is
there for our youth and I would not like to belittle that, as the
member may suggest, as only because the unemployment rate
among our youth is among the highest compared to any other age
groups. We have to focus on our youth.
It does not mean we have not focused as well on job creation for
those beyond the youth age. Jobs have been created for them. We
have the Team Canada spirit where the government in partnership
with the private sector would create jobs. When we work
co-operatively and in collaboration with each other we will create
more jobs.
As I indicated during debate, of course the government is not
happy that we have created only this much. We will continue to do
more, but if we can work together we will achieve that goal.
Mr. Jim Abbott (Kootenay East, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I will be
sharing my time with the member for Okanagan Centre.
It seems that when people put together a budget, and certainly it
should be no different for a government, a budget should be
reflective of a plan. As we take a look at the affairs of the
government day after day we see they are disorganized, in disarray.
Most of all we have a strong sense of disappointment that the
Liberals are effectively betraying the trust given to them by
Canadians in the 1993 election.
None is anymore true than in the case of the heritage minister.
The heritage minister has been going around Canada making verbal
droppings of different ideas that she has. She has no organization,
no plan and no idea of what will be happening next. Let me give
some examples.
Before she came on board, this has been a problem within the
department of heritage right from the word go. Probably the most
classic example would be the so-called Juneau commission that
was examining the affairs of the CBC, Telefilm Canada and the
National Film Board.
It started off in May of last year with the idea of having its report
complete by September. It did not complete the report by
September. It said it would be completing it by November. We were
rather curious to see how many dollars it had already consumed to
the end of its original report period. It had consumed over $900,000
in that period of time.
The committee went past its November deadline and said it
would deliver its report in January. Again we went to access to
information and we discovered that the $900,000 had ballooned to
$1.6 million. Within that $1.6 million was an entry for $60,000 for
the three commissioners. I think it was instructive that in the
original set of numbers of $900,000 there was no money for the
commissioners, no money at least reported at that point, and
suddenly out of the $1.6 million there is $60,000.
Then the committee came forward with its report in January, and
what a report it was. It was absolutely brilliant, saying that
Canadian who chose not to watch the CBC and who get cable
would really enjoy paying an extra cable fee, an extra cable tax to
cover the costs of the CBC which they did not want to watch in the
first place. Or if they did not want to get cable, maybe it would be a
good idea if we were to charge them some kind of a levy or tax on
their video rentals. Apart from the fact that it really did not
accomplish anything we know the report is going to end up on the
shelf and nothing is ever going to happen to it, and what did we
pay? We paid $2.75 million for that report.
(1230)
What was particularly instructive was how the heritage
minister's friends made out, the cultural elite who were doing the
report. In the first instance in September there was no mention of
any fee for the commissioners. In November there was mention of
$60,000. In January when this wonderful tome finally came
forward, it cost the Canadian taxpayers $300,000 for the part time
work of these commissioners.
We dug a little further and of course we were making noises
about the fact that it did not seem right that these people should be
getting $100,000 for about seven or eight months of part time
work. One of the commissioners suddenly piped up and said: ``Oh,
I did not take anything'', which makes it even worse. Now there are
two commissioners digging into the pockets of Canadian taxpayers
for $150,000 each for seven months work. Not bad work if one can
get it I guess. That is typical of this government. It takes care of its
friends and keeps on going through these reports but it does not
have any plan.
When the heritage minister took over the portfolio what
happened with respect to Radio Canada International? Radio
Canada International performs a valuable function for Canada. It
has approximately 125 employees and its budget is approximately
$16 million. It is of interest to note that in order to get the short
wave
1446
out, almost $1 million of the $16 million is consumed in hydro
power alone. It is really quite an enterprise. However, it has 125
loyal employees who were told in November last year that their
services would no longer be required as of April 1.
The heritage minister loves to do these little droppings all over
the place. She said that we were going to save Radio Canada
International, which was good news. Except she got her portfolio in
the latter part of January and then she had to figure out where the
money was going to come from.
She went to the CBC. We are going to be talking about the CBC
in just a second. She ended up taking $8 million from the CBC.
Then she scavenged around with a tin cup and came up with
another $8 million for a total of the $16 million.
There is no plan. Radio Canada International is still in the state it
was previously. Radio Canada International has a reprieve of one
more year with absolutely no idea of how it is going to be kept on
the air or how it is going to keep this valuable service going.
It has been my position as Reform Party heritage critic that we
have to look at privatizing and look at other ways of funding
valuable functions like Radio Canada International other than from
the pockets of taxpayers, other than going into debt. However there
is no plan.
I should note that members of the staff and management of
Radio Canada International are to be highly commended for
staying on the job doing their work and keeping the faith while the
minister kept them waiting for a full five and a half months from
the time they were told they were no longer needed. Only two
weeks before they did not know where their next mortgage
payment would come from, she said she had scrounged around and
had come up with some dollars.
What about the CBC? The minister is particularly noted for what
I call her Canadiana. She loves to say that she is going to give us a
much more wonderful Canada. I must admit that along with a lot of
Canadians I am becoming increasingly sceptical of whether the
government will be able to do what it says it will be able to do.
What the government says and what it does very frequently do not
match up.
(1235)
An example is the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation which the
Reform Party has said should be privatized. The Liberals have said
out of one side of their mouth they are going to keep the CBC as a
public broadcaster funded with public funds, but they have already
cut $227 million. They now have to find $150 million more by
1998. It is no wonder that without any kind of direction or a
mandate the unions today are in a position of being able to take a
strike vote the week of April 22, next week.
A report from Canadian Press today states that if no deal is
reached between the CBC's three unions and management a strike
or lockout involving 7,000 employees could happen as early as
May. They are presently fighting over the issue, as it were, of
contracting out, in other words, how much information or
programming will be done in house by these unions for the CBC.
This question cannot be resolved because of the lack of direction
of the heritage minister and the lack of direction of the government.
This is the reason I and many Canadians are so sceptical that the
government will be able to do what it says it is going to do.
Last Friday the minister announced a $10 million program. I
should explain that this comes out of a $120 million slush fund set
up by the finance minister. This $10 million program is called
Young Canada Works. It theoretically is going to put 1,900 people
in the age bracket of 16 to 30 to work. It is going to involve high
school and college students. Of those 1,900 it would be fair to
speculate that this summer about one million people are going to be
looking for work. That means one person in five hundred is going
to be able to take advantage of the program, but how much of a
program is it?
Let us make it clear. The Canadian Museums Association in a
news release it also put out over the weekend expressed some
happiness that this was in place. However, the association should
know that the Deputy Prime Minister, Canada's heritage minister,
has no idea where the funds are coming from for any of its projects
either. What she has basically done is she has slipped her hand into
this $120 million slush fund and has come out with $10 million.
This is going to be shared with other institutions. It is going to be
shared with Young Canada Works in both official languages, Young
Canada Works in national parks and historic sites, Young Canada
Works for urban and aboriginal youth, and Young Canada Works in
heritage institutions.
The point of my submission is that this government has no plan.
The minister is out of control. She has no idea of what she is doing.
This budget and the way the minister is administering her heritage
department is disgraceful.
Mr. Jesse Flis (Parkdale-High Park, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
hon. member for Kootenay East began his debate by stating that the
government has absolutely no plan and that the budget should be
reflective of the government's plan.
I refer him to the throne speech we began this session with. The
throne speech did refer to our commitment to jobs and growth,
youth, science, technology and trade. The throne speech referred to
security for Canadians. A secure social safety net is very important
for the people of Canada. The throne speech referred to a modern
and united country. Federalism is constantly evolving. There were
1447
promises made in the throne speech about a first ministers meeting
which will be coming up probably in June of this year.
I now refer the member to the budget. The purpose of the budget
is to spell out the government's plan in detail and the
implementation of the government's plan. Beginning with our
platform in 1993 we fulfilled certain commitments halfway
through our mandate. Now we are showing Canadians how we are
going to meet the rest of our commitments in the latter half of our
mandate.
(1240)
I would like the hon. member to read the throne speech and the
budget speech again. I think he will be assured and he can assure
his constituents that this government has a very clear plan for the
future growth of this country.
Mr. Abbott: Mr. Speaker, the member unwittingly makes my
point. My point is that there is no connection between what is
contained in the throne speech and the budget and the activities of
the minister. For example on the issue of the fly flag program of the
Minister of Canadian Heritage, the Reform Party would say ``buy
flag, fly flag''. In other words, let us have some responsibility. Let
us spend $2 on a little flag and let us fly the flag. Let us spend $30
on a larger flag let us fly the flag. Let us take some responsibility
for that.
The minister wants to go back to 1967 and as a consequence she
has come forward with a plan. Her fly flag program was running
before the civil servants in her ministry had any idea where the
flags were going to come from. Calls were coming in and they had
absolutely no idea what they were doing or how they were going to
do it. Is it going to cost $2 million, $4 million, $6 million? I do not
know and neither do her officials. She came up with $150,000 out
of thin air for a lacrosse project. It goes on and on and is absolutely
astounding.
The Liberal member has underscored my point. Yes we have a
throne speech and yes we have a budget, both which have nothing
whatsoever to do with what the minister is doing on a day to day
basis.
Mr. Ronald J. Duhamel (St. Boniface, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am
surprised my colleague has attacked the Deputy Prime Minister and
minister of heritage, with her knowledge and vision of Canada, her
commitment to this nation, her boundless energy, her tremendous
creativity. I applaud her flag program. I cannot see the value in
attacking it.
I am also disappointed the member would say the minister does
not have a plan. The minister does have a plan. Either the hon.
member does not understand the plan or he is simply quibbling
about the fact it is not his plan and therefore he is unhappy.
I would ask my colleague to tell us what his plans are. He
suggests he knows what he would do. Let us hear it.
Mr. Abbott: Mr. Speaker, it is rather silly to say let us hear the
Reform Party plan. In 30 seconds we are supposed to have a plan.
Every time we end up talking about the heritage minister and the
fact that she does run willy-nilly on these things, suddenly I am
attacking her commitment to Canada. I would suggest that kind of
rhetoric is really unfortunate. To question the commitment to
Canada of anyone in this House, save 53 members, is beyond the
pale.
We should be able to point out that the minister does run around
indiscriminately making all sorts of announcements which her
officials then have to run around picking up after her, without my
being questioned as to whether I question her credibility to
Canadians. Of course she is proud to be Canadian and is committed
to Canada, as are the majority of people in this House and I.
The minister is lacking in credibility on the promises she made
on the issue of the GST. She is also lacking in credibility by
continuing to come forward saying let us do this with the collection
fee for the CBC, or let us do that with respect to the CRTC. There is
no plan which is exactly the point.
The Department of Canadian Heritage has the ability to be a
tremendous fixer of Canada, a cement builder for Canada. It can
glue things and permanently pull things together in Canada. As
long as this minister continues to fly off in all directions at once we
will never see the full value of the Department of Canadian
Heritage, and this is a shame.
(1245)
Mr. Werner Schmidt (Okanagan Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
draw the attention of the House on this debate to perhaps a little
different approach. I focus it in the words of a professor at a
university who was referring to Aristotle, the great teacher and
great philosopher about democracy and how it should operate. He
said people in government exercise a teaching function. Among
other things we, the people, see what they, the government
officials, do and think that this is how we should act.
Whether we like it or not the position of legislators in this and
many other countries and how they act is somehow interpreted by
the people that they should act that way as well.
If we examine this budget from that context and look at the
message it sends to the people, in particular to young people, I
suggest that there is very little to be proud of. Let us take a few
moments to reflect on some of the messages the budget sends.
1448
The first message is if you cannot afford it, borrow it. The
second is if you do not want to pay for it, borrow it and tax future
generations and/or spread the burden on to others in society. How
have Canadians responded to these messages not only in this
budget but in previous budgets? This is not a new trend in Canada.
For example, if you cannot afford it, borrow. Personal debt in
Canada, including credit card debt, is at an all time high. There is
some indication that less than 10 per cent of the disposable income
of Canadians is discretionary. In other words, they do not have
much flexibility to spend that little bit of income they have left
over after they are taxed. Is it any wonder our retailers are crying
that people are not buying? Our economy is dying because they
cannot buy. How can they? They have borrowed to the maximum.
Almost all of their discretionary income is going to paying those
debts so they do not have money to spend.
Then the retailers and the other business people ask how can they
get them to buy more. They have various schemes like do not pay
until next year, do not pay until two years from now, and most
recently, do not pay anything until three years from now. That is
dangerous.
The second message was if you do not want to pay for it, borrow
it and tax future generations and/or spread the burden on others in
society. There is a very strong situation today, and some legislation
has been introduced in the House, that students do not repay their
loans. Is that good? No, it is not. Can we blame them when they
look at their government and say the government is not living up to
its promises? It borrows to pay the interest on the debt that is
outstanding. The students see this and say there is a double
standard. The government says to the student ``you pay'' but when
it comes to its own debt it just keeps on borrowing more.
Abuses to the UI system are examples of how we distribute it
around to other members of society. Quit a job that one has to work
at for 365 days and get a job where one can be employed for 12
weeks and then collect pogey for the other 40 weeks of the year.
Who pays for that? Not the individual who incurred it; it is
someone else.
The example Canadians see that is set by the federal government
in this and previous budgets is one which no one should follow if
they want to be in control of their own financial future. The budget
is the major policy document of a government and as such ought to
be the best example of how Canadians should operate. It does
exactly the opposite.
There is another part to this. The budget as it was proposed to us
says it is not necessary to tell the whole truth; just tell the people
what they want to hear. The deficit is going down which means we
are getting closer to balancing the budget. That is good, is it not?
So far, so good.
(1250)
However, do not tell them the debt is actually increasing. Do not
tell them the interest is actually increasing. Do not tell them it will
continue into the future because there is no plan to eliminate the
deficit. Nor is there a target date as to when the budget will be
balanced. Do not tell them there will be less disposable income as a
result of this budget because taxes will have to increase to pay for it
all.
Do not admit that in the election campaign the government
promised to kill, slash, eliminate the GST. Instead, quote page 22
of the red book which does not promise to eliminate the GST but to
harmonize it.
Do not admit the verbal promises of the Prime Minister and the
Deputy Prime Minister went well beyond the provisions of the red
book. Instead, when called to account, they declare: ``I am not
responsible for what I said. I am only responsible for what is said in
the red book''. That is quite an example, is it not? It is the wrong
example for our young people.
Do not tell them there will be a direct and negative impact on
social programs, particularly medicare, education and seniors'
pensions. In other words, there will be less money available for
these programs.
At the same time, we have the government telling us it is really
serious about looking after seniors, making sure their pension
benefits will continue, that they will be at least as well off as they
are today. How can it be serious about a statement like that when
the message the budget sends is different?
At the heart of this comes another issue, freedom or liberty.
Probably the most serious implication of this and previous budgets
is that this important policy document, especially in our senior
government, is the absence of wisdom and responsibility in that
budget.
It is not wise to spend more money on government programs
than the government collects in revenue. It is not responsible to
incur debt in one generation which a future generation will have to
service and ultimately repay.
How different the attitude that was just published about
Albertans. They were asked in a recent poll what the government
should do with the surplus. They said to the government pay down
the debt, do not reduce taxes. That is wisdom. They understand that
as the debt is paid down, the interest to service that debt comes
down. That means even if the taxes are kept at the same level, they
will buy more. That is wisdom. That is also responsible.
From that perspective, the Alberta position is the correct
position. The position of the federal government says keep on
borrowing. It is dishonourable and it is an example that we as
Canadians should not follow in our own lives.
1449
The burgeoning debt is the problem. It is the issue. It stands
at $581 billion today. We have an interest bill of $47 billion. In
the four years, as indicated in the 1996 budget, this contemporary
federal government has added over $100 billion to the federal
debt.
Why is that important? As has been already indicated, it
increases the service costs, particularly the interest payments. Any
dollar that is added to the debt will change the amount of interest
paid.
Each point of interest has an impact as well. Supposing the
interest rates should rise, and it looks like they will, each point rise
in the interest rate itself adds $1 billion immediately to the total
interest bill.
How much is $1 billion? There is a very interesting bit of
arithmetic that somebody did not too long ago. I wish I had the time
to figure these things out. Somebody sat down and figured it out. If
one counted a number at the rate of one per second consistently,
each second there would be a complete number. It would take just
short of 32 years to get to $1 billion. That is how much would be
added to the interest if the interest rate rises 1 per cent.
(1255)
Each time that happens it increases the amount of money that
future generations will be expected to repay. At present levels of
roughly 30 million people in Canada and a federal debt of about
$600 billion, that is $20,000 per person. Any child born today
comes into the world with a $20,000 debt they will be responsible
for in order for us to liquidate that date.
That is what we are doing but is that what Canadians wanted? I
do not think so. The number one requirement, which the
government hit right on the head when it went into the election, is
to create jobs, jobs, jobs. That is exactly what we wanted.
We had over this last week a very interesting development on
Friday afternoon and it raises some very interesting questions. For
example, airlines in Canada must be 75 per cent owned by
Canadians in order to fly but bus lines transporting people on the
highways do not have that restriction. What kind of sense does this
make? Is this a matter of Canadian culture and Canadian identity or
is it about competition and preferential treatment of some over
others?
What is it we want to preserve? A viable economy? A Canadian
culture? Preservation of our social programs? I say it is all three.
We want all of these. Our job should be to establish and maintain a
culture which rewards entrepreneurship, innovation and research
and ensures a level, competitive and honest workplace and
marketplace.
Governments lead by example. I implore the Prime Minister that
the government change the example so we can follow it because it
reflects wisdom and responsibility, not this last budget which
reflects the exact opposite of wisdom and responsibilities; it is
neither wise nor responsible.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
following on the point of not being wise or responsible, that is a
fairly substantial indictment.
Earlier I spoke about being part of the solution rather than part of
the problem. When the government took over after the last
election, the financial year ended in March 1994 and the
government had a deficit of 6 per cent of GDP.
The finance minister in his first budget brought in the concept of
two year rolling targets. We have achieved 5 per cent in the first
full year of deficit to GDP; 4 per cent in the second; 3 per cent will
be the percentage at the end of March 1997; and a commitment by
the government, by the finance minister, to further reduce that to 2
per cent deficit to GDP.
We are getting very close to delivering to the people of Canada a
balanced budget. We have hit the targets. We have set them. They
have been realistic and balanced in a way which will not impact
negatively on seniors, on our health care system which keeps the
country together, on young people, on jobs and on economic
growth that we have been experiencing.
The indictment this member makes tells me he is spending more
time lamenting the past rather than looking forward to the future.
Mr. Schmidt: Mr. Speaker, I find it rather interesting that the
member opposite would suggest that the meeting of the target of 2
per cent of GDP is a desirable goal for the deficit.
I wonder if the member recognizes that doing that means a
perpetuation of a deficit on a continuing basis. If the gross
domestic product should rise, which I hope it will and it looks like
it will, it will automatically allow the government flexibility to
increase that deficit which means the end result is not a decrease in
the government debt but an increase in the government debt.
The very point the hon. member is making is the exact opposite
of what he is trying to prove. It it true that there is less of a deficit
today than there was last year, and that is commendable, but the
point is that even $1 of deficit is too much because it increases the
debt. When will the government recognize that to be wise and to be
responsible means to tell the truth, the whole truth, not part of it?
Tell the people the implications of this debt. Tell them the
implications of the interest rates and how it will increase the debt.
That is the whole story.
(1300)
Am I supposed to suggest that everything about this budget is
bad? I did not say that. I said tell the truth, tell it the way it really is
rather than telling part of the story. That is the issue.
1450
The member makes a big point about being on track and having
reached the targets, et cetera. There was a target. It was to
eliminate the GST. I ask him, where is the elimination of the GST?
That was the promise. That was the promise they campaigned on.
Where is it?
Mr. Jesse Flis (Parkdale-High Park, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
cannot let the hon. member's incorrect statements go unchallenged.
I refer him to the budget speech. He complains about what was
and was not said to the public. The Minister of Finance said: ``The
new funds that government must borrow from financial markets
each year will be cut to $6 billion, 0.7 per cent of GDP in 1997, the
lowest among all G-7 central governments''. The minister went on
to say: ``The debt to GDP ratio, the size of the debt in relation to
Canada's economy, will finally begin to decline in 1997-98. The
economy will grow faster than the debt''. There are the statements
in black and white made publicly in the House of Commons.
How can the Reform members, speaker after speaker, say that we
are not open and honest with the public?
Mr. Schmidt: Mr. Speaker, my point has been proven again. I
quite agree the government is going in the right direction. But it
does not matter how long we proceed or how much slower we
proceed to the edge of the waterfall, the waterfall is coming. If we
slow down the canoe by paddling backwards slower or faster so
that progress toward the edge of the precipice decreases, we are
still going to come to the edge of the precipice sooner or later.
With all due respect to those statements, the fact still remains
that the debt is increasing and our interest costs are increasing.
Unless we change that direction we will not get our debt under
control.
Hon. Anne McLellan (Minister of Natural Resources, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, it is my pleasure to speak in support of the 1996
budget brought down in the House on March 6, 1996 by my hon.
colleague, the Minister of Finance.
Let me say at the outset that I believe this is a good budget for all
Canadians. It has particular relevance to many aspects of my
portfolio as Minister of Natural Resources.
[Translation]
The difficult decisions we took and the measures that we
announced create an environment conducive to economic growth
and job creation.
[English]
The variety of measures announced by the hon. Minister of
Finance affecting the natural resources sector result from a series
of intensive consultations with the provinces, with industry and
with stakeholders in Canada's natural resources sector. We listened
to the views of Canadians and we delivered.
The announcements by the Minister of Finance solidify my
department's progress to focus on sustainable development and
jobs and growth in the energy, mining, forestry and earth sciences
sectors. This progress is critical because these sectors make a
substantial contribution to Canada's overall economic growth, to
job creation and to the trade surplus.
In addition, the work of my department reflects the federal
government's core responsibilities in those areas where national
effort and co-ordination are necessary.
[Translation]
First, I would like to talk about the budget announcements
regarding renewable energy and energy efficiency. Canadians who
work in the renewable energy sector have a vision of the future.
They work hard to ensure that Canada is at the leading edge of
developments in this important sector.
(1305)
[English]
In the spirit that environmental health and economic
development should complement each other, the federal
government's green power procurement policy and the tax changes
in the 1996 budget emphasized the commitment we made in the red
book to renewable energy and energy efficiency industries.
The income tax changes will provide a level playing field for
certain renewable and non-renewable energy investments. The
creation of the Canadian renewable and conservation expenses, or
CRCE, will provide renewable energy investments with similar
treatment to that afforded to non-renewables.
This will attract new investment to the Canadian renewable
energy industry. Officials in my department will join their
colleagues at Finance Canada to begin consultations with
stakeholders to determine the types of expenses that will be
included under this expenditure category. I expect this work to be
completed this fall.
I should point out that I have been gratified to receive many
letters from individuals and associations in the renewable energy
sector who expressed their thanks to the Government of Canada for
these progressive announcements in the 1996 budget. These
announcements respond to the needs of the Canadian renewable
energy industry. We listened and we delivered.
For this reason, I am working with my colleague, the hon.
Minister of Finance, on a process for consultations on proposals for
tax measures to promote energy efficiency investments. I expect to
join my hon. colleague in making an announcement on the
timetable for consultations very shortly. The objective for this
process will be to recommend measures for implementation in the
1997 budget.
In the meantime, I am committed to ensuring we play a role in
further progress by Canada's renewable energy sectors. For
1451
example, in the very near future I expect to release a renewable
energy strategy. This strategy will continue to emphasize the
importance of R and D and stronger market development activities.
Success by Canada's renewable energy sector, both at home and
abroad, will contribute to economic growth and jobs. In addition,
the renewable energy sector offers significant potential to help
Canada move toward its international climate change commitment
to stabilize greenhouse gas emissions at 1990 levels by the year
2000.
Let me now move to more traditional energy forms. In this
regard I would like to speak about Alberta's oil sands. Let me
remind members of the House that the oil sands deposits in Alberta
are estimated to contain more recoverable oil than all the reserves
of Saudi Arabia, more than 300 million barrels. The national oil
sands task force has estimated that in the next 25 years new
investments totalling approximately $25 billion will help create
approximately 44,000 permanent new jobs in the oil sands industry.
The federal government recognizes the potential of the oil sands
industry to spur economic growth and create jobs. However, to
realize the potential of this enormous resource, the oil sands
industry requires increased investment.
To send positive signals to the investment community, the 1996
federal budget provides a generic tax treatment for all oil sands
projects. In short, the tax treatment previously accorded to oil
sands projects using mining methods has been extended to cover all
oil sands projects. Tax incentives that were available for new
projects and major expansions will now include investments in
environmental efficiency improvements.
The Government of Canada has made these changes for three
reasons. They will promote economic growth Canada-wide. They
will increase domestic oil supply and they will stimulate job
creation.
The fiscal changes made in the 1996 budget, along with recent
changes to Alberta's royalty framework, will establish a clear,
consistent and attractive regime for oil sands investors. These
changes will encourage them to invest in Canada rather than
competing projects in other countries.
(1310)
The importance of this attractive framework for the economy of
Alberta can hardly be overstated. There is no other industrial or
resource opportunity that compares in size to the oil sands. Oil
sands development offers the promise of major growth in
investment and income well into the next century.
I should point out these benefits will not be restricted to Alberta.
Studies conducted under contract to Industry Canada demonstrate
the procurement benefits from oil sands development will flow to
more than 50 different industrial groups. Simply put, jobs will be
created across the country.
Moreover, the changes in the 1996 federal budget affecting the
oil sands industry reflect many of the recommendations by the
national task force on oil sands strategies. Again, we listened and
we delivered.
Let us move to other changes announced by the Minister of
Finance that provide benefits for Canadian mining and oil and gas
industries. In mining, investment in Canadian mineral exploration
has been rising. In fact, 1996 will be a banner year for mineral
exploration. The Government of Canada shares the excitement in
this increased exploration activity. We are working hard to ensure a
bright future for mining by living up to the commitments made in
the Liberal mining policy.
[Translation]
The mining industry, including the Prospectors and Developers
Association of Canada and the Association des prospecteurs du
Québec, were asking for changes to the flow-through share system.
[English]
They requested that eligibility rules for these shares be tightened
to ensure that the benefits are delivered only where they are most
needed to support new grassroots exploration activity. The 1996
budget delivered.
In addition, the Minister of Finance announced an extension of
the 60-day rule for flow-through shares to one year. As a
consequence, mineral and metal and oil and gas exploration
activities will be more efficient. The risk to investors will be
reduced and greater efficiencies will likely lead to more
discoveries. These new mineral discoveries will provide new
opportunities for economic growth and jobs in Canada and increase
the benefits of jobs and growth in existing mining communities in
both rural and urban Canada.
I would like to move to other budget announcements, in
particular those concerning Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, or
AECL. AECL's budget will be reduced from $174 million in
1996-97 to $100 million in 1998-99. AECL will focus on
maintaining a viable and competitive Candu business at a reduced
cost to the federal government. AECL will capitalize on its
business potential and will continue to make a significant
contribution to Canada's economic growth and the creation of high
skilled jobs in an area of advanced technology.
Nearly 20 per cent of Canada's electricity is produced by Candu
reactors and the foreign sales of Candu technology bring important
economic benefits home to Canada. For example, the projects to
build three Candu reactors in South Korea are bringing more than
$1 billion in contracts to Canadian companies.
The magnitude of the budget cuts required difficult trade-offs.
One of these trade-offs was funding for basic science activities that
are not directly linked to the Candu program. However, the
1452
Government of Canada is committed to seeking alternative sources
of funding and other institutional arrangements for some of the key
basic science activities that AECL has conducted until now.
[Translation]
Let me tell you that the decision of the federal government to
withdraw from the financing of R and D programs concerning
fusion in Ontario and Quebec was a very difficult one to make but
that fusion is not presently a priority of the federal government.
Actually, we believe it will take some 30 years before fusion
technology can be marketed. The Government of Canada must
clearly focus its resources on short term priorities.
(1315)
Moreover we believe that Ontario Hydro and Hydro-Quebec can
financially support R and D fusion projects on sites where this
sector is a priority.
[English]
The federal government is determined to deliver good
government at a lower cost to the taxpayers of Canada. My
department continues to play a leading role in this effort among all
federal departments and agencies. Let me make a few comments
about the budget's announcements with respect to the operations of
my department. All members of this House will recall that the
results of the first phase of the federal program review dramatically
reduced the size and the budget of Natural Resources Canada and
many other departments.
The results of the second phase of program review have
identified further reductions in my department's budget of $14.6
million or 3.3 per cent in fiscal year 1998-99. Both programs and
staff levels will be affected. While detailed decisions will be taken
during the next 18 months, present estimates suggest a reduction of
between 75 to 100 positions in 1998-99. These further reductions
together with cuts announced last year will result in a reduction of
roughly 60 per cent of the resources in my department.
These reductions will be reflected in a more focused role for
NRCan in the natural resources sector, a role that emphasizes
science and technology, the regulatory and policy regime,
international trade and market access and knowledge of Canada's
land mass.
Program review is a continuing commitment to get government
right. We will continue to examine what we do and how we do it.
The objective is to keep looking for a more efficient and effective
contribution to a stronger federation. This is critical to meeting the
future challenges that face Canada, challenges that include
maintaining the federal contribution to jobs, growth and
sustainable development in the energy, forestry, mining and earth
sciences industries. NRCan is achieving what we promised in the
speech from the throne. We are withdrawing from areas where
others can function more appropriately.
As a result the work of my department reflects the federal
government's core responsibilities in the areas of international
trade and investment, science and technology, aboriginal matters,
federal crown lands, national statistics and environmental issues.
These are areas where national effort and co-ordination are
necessary.
In addition, my department is already engaged in many
partnerships with stakeholders in the natural resources sector,
including the provinces and the private sector, to explore further
changes in the way it fulfils its federal responsibilities. In fact, I
believe my department is setting an example for other federal
departments and agencies. NRCan's approach to partnerships is an
excellent model for efficient and effective federal activities that
reflect the objectives set out in the speech from the throne.
In conclusion, this is a good budget for all Canadians and it is
particularly a good budget for the natural resource sectors. The
announcements by the hon. Minister of Finance concerning our
resource sectors result from serious, meaningful and productive
consultations with all stakeholders.
The income tax changes will have positive benefits for these
sectors throughout Canada. These changes will increase prospects
for investment, stimulate economic growth and create jobs for
Canadians. In addition they will stimulate investment in key areas
that are critical to Canada's progress toward sustainable
development. The reason for this is simple. The Government of
Canada listened and the Government of Canada delivered. We will
continue to listen to all Canadians and we will continue to deliver.
Mr. Bob Mills (Red Deer, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I listened with
interest to the minister's comments about Canada and about
Alberta in particular.
(1320 )
In Alberta there is a great deal of pride developing. We have our
deficit at zero. We now have a surplus budget. We now have a plan
to take care of our debt. That is very positive particularly in the
resource industry. We have a very positive feeling that things are
moving forward. When is the minister's government going to
develop that same plan at least to get the deficit under control and
then show that vision that something further is going to happen?
On a second issue, the many businesses in my province of
Alberta and her province of Alberta are very concerned that those
provinces which have socialized their utilities are still going to
receive the advantages of the federal government's tax deduction.
Those provinces that have privatized and have a free enterprise
efficient utility industry are now not going to get that refund. The
effect of that on all business, in turning one province against the
other and not creating a level playing field is of great concern to
1453
many of my constituents and I am sure to many of hers and many
others in provinces like Alberta. I would like her to commenton that.
Ms. McLellan: Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for his
many questions. Let me see if I can remember them all as I work
through them.
First of all the hon. member talks about a plan in relation to
deficit and debt reduction. It is very plain that if the hon. member
reads the three budgets that my colleague, the hon. Minister of
Finance has brought down over these past three years he will see a
plan. I would suggest probably for the first time in many years one
sees a plan, a clear blueprint, in relation to how we will deal with
the deficit and the debt in this country.
I think the success of that plan, the acknowledgement of that
plan, is clear in the reaction not only of financial markets here at
home but financial markets around the world. If my hon. colleague
needs reassurance he can find it in the three budgets that my
colleague, the Minister of Finance, has delivered.
In relation to the specific question the hon. member raises
regarding PUITTA, the public utilities tax, this was a rebate
provided initially by both the province of Alberta and the
Government of Canada. The Government of Alberta chose to
repeal the rebate to Albertans in 1990. I can direct the hon. member
to the exact page in the Alberta legislature's Hansard if he would
like. Alberta did so specifically because of its deficit and debt
situation. As I understand it the Government of Alberta in fact has
saved itself $90 million a year by repealing its rebate.
The federal government chose to do the same thing in the 1995
budget delivered by the Minister of Finance. However because the
federal government is acutely aware of the importance of level
playing field issues, the Minister of Finance has created a task
force involving ADMs of taxation across this country. This task
force is looking at the whole question of tax treatment of private
and public corporations.
As the hon. member is undoubtedly aware, this difference in tax
treatment arises because of section 125 of the Constitution Act,
1867. This provides the Minister of Finance with some significant
limitations in terms of how we deal with issues of level playing
field.
However, the Minister of Finance has chosen to create this task
force on which might I add there are not only federal and provincial
finance officials but also representatives from industry, which I
believe include TransAlta Utilities Corporation, Ontario Hydro and
Nova Scotia Power. We are looking at this difficult question of the
level playing field and how one creates it in the context of public
and private corporate entities. We look forward to the report of that
task force in the months ahead.
(1325)
[Translation]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Resuming debate. The hon.
member for Témiscamingue. Would the member inform the Chair
if he will be sharing his time?
Mr. Pierre Brien (Témiscamingue, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I will
share my time with the hon. member for Drummond, who will
speak during the second half of the period. Afterwards, there will
be a 5 minute questions and comments period.
It is my turn to have my say on the last federal budget that was
brought down on March 6. During the next 10 minutes, I would like
to address certain elements of the budget pertaining essentially to
the new Canada social transfer.
We knew since last year that the federal government planned to
merge its old cash transfers to provinces into a single new program,
the Canada social transfer. This program is a combination of
established program financing and the Canada assistance program.
What the government has done is reorganize various transfer
programs, establishing a single program and reducing the global
envelope. The amount of funds that will be devoted to the Canada
social transfer will be $11 billion. By creating this new package,
the government is trying to delude us into believing that, in the
field of transfer payments, it did not make real cuts. And to come to
this twisted conclusion, it ads up the tax points which were given in
the past, and it ads up the equalization payments if that can be
helpful in certain cases. In short, the government is twisting the
facts.
Let us simply look at the figures, the real ones. When it came to
power, this government devoted $17 billion to the old programs,
the cost shared program for post-secondary education, the Canada
assistance plan and the cost shared health program. The
government provided $17 billion; this year, it will provide only $11
billion. At one point it was even almost $18 billion. So, it reduced
that amount by 6 or 7 billion. It is simple: 17 minus 11 gives 6. It
cannot have us believe that it is giving us more money than before.
No matter what numbers you add, no matter how you present it,
reality speaks for itself.
At the same time, the government is maintaining the same
standards. A few minutes ago, an hon. member on the other side
said: ``We guarantee social security because we are still maintain a
presence in the health field to ensure a universal system for all
Canadians''. What the Liberals do not say is that they ask the
provinces to find new ways to give the same services with less
money but by applying the same standards. The government
1454
announced its cuts one or two years ago but, in practice, the
provinces are the ones that have to live with them.
We see Quebec and Ontario trying to cope with those cuts that
were imposed on them. In fact, I am not sure that Canadians are
convinced that the federal government is there to ensure an
absolute social safety net, as the members opposite claim. The
federal government wants to take credit for the good things and
pass the bad things on to the provinces. Often in politics, someone
will reap the benefits from a situation and have others pay for it.
That is the strategy behind the Canada social transfer.
I think that we must be honest with the public and say that the $6
billion in cuts made by the federal government in transfers to the
provinces is in money that went to social assistance, health care
and education. These are three areas from which the federal
government has withdrawn, asking the provinces to make the more
surgical cuts.
I now want to deal with the area of post-secondary education. In
the case of Quebec, there have been cuts totalling nearly $300
million. The federal government is telling students that it is the
institutions and the provincial government which are raising tuition
fees, that it has nothing to do with it. Of course, what choice do
they have when they end up with $250 to $300 million less? They
either have to make substantial cuts in the system or increase
tuition fees. For the moment, the Government of Quebec has
chosen to try to absorb the cuts without raising tuition fees. But
other provinces have had to do it, and Quebec will have to consider
doing it also, if the federal government continues to follow this
path.
(1330)
Students are told that there are no cuts, but there is a $250 to
$300 million shortfall that, sooner or later, will inevitably result in
increased tuition fees or reduced services. At the same time, the
government proposes a student summer employment program.
Many of us know about that kind of program. When we were
students, we all have looked for summer jobs to help pay for our
education and to try to gain practical experience in a field related to
our field of study.
In its first year in office, the government maintained the funds
allocated in this area. Last year, it reduced these funds by about 40
per cent. This year, it is practically doubling these funds to make
the annual cuts of $300 million in the case of Quebec less difficult
to swallow. The government will pour $60 million more into the
summer student employment program for one year only, so it can
say: ``Look what we are doing for you''. It is getting as many
political points as it can from these $60 million.
We will see what kind of program the federal government will
announce to get more visibility, while cuts are being made in a
more indirect way so that somebody else has to deal with them and
pay the political price for them.
Figure it out yourself. Take $300 million a year and multiply that
by five, ten or even fifteen years if you want, and compare that to
$60 million for one year. Will there be more? We will see, but I
would be surprised. The government has not said that this was a
permanent increase in that program's budget.
So this is a way to make students swallow the bitter pill, to avoid
creating too much dissatisfaction among a client group which
seriously questions the existence of the federal government and
which counts a high percentage of sovereignists in Quebec. The
government avoids creating discontent as much as possible among
students or tries to make sure they will not be able to clearly
understand what is really going on.
I have discussed with some representatives and no one is being
fooled. Student associations have a clear picture of what is going
on. They too have problems understanding how they come out as
winners in such a situation. This does not mean that we should
make no financial effort in this sector. We still must have the
honesty to recognize what is being done. A budget must not be
nothing but words that conceal reality.
In the last two or three minutes I have left, I would like to talk
about subsidies to dairy producers. The two regional county
municipalities located at the southern and northern ends of my
riding, Témiscamingue and Abitibi-Ouest, have numerous dairy
producers. The last budget announced a phasing out of subsidies to
dairy producers.
This will create a new reality: there will either be a rise in the
price of milk or a major income crisis for dairy producers. The
federal government would like us to believe that it took this
decision in consultation with producers. The government refers to
industry and says it talked to industrial entrepreneurs but it never
says it talked to producers. This is difficult to accept.
What people accept even less is that at the same time, the federal
government has long had an agriculture policy that supported in a
very substantial way the grain industry in the West. We had the
Western Grain Transportation Act and the Crow rate, known by
everyone in the agricultural sector. When the federal government
decided to abolish that, generous compensation programs were set
up.
For them, there was a transition period, but for Quebec
producers, there has just been talk of looking into it, discussing it,
but nothing has been done, nothing concrete announced, and no
major developments are expected.
How can it be that, when abolition of the Western Grain
Transportation Act was announced, compensation mechanisms
were already in place? How is it that, when Quebec and eastern
Canada are involved-for it is not just Quebec but also part of
1455
Ontario-the thing is impossible, while, when the west was
involved, it was an absolute priority?
In the federal government's eyes, right from the start, agriculture
has essentially equalled western beef and grain. This is hard for
taxpayers in Témiscamingue to swallow, when they are dairy
producers or the neighbours of these producers.
This last budget contained something unacceptable to the people
in the rural areas of Quebec, and Ontario, and the dairy producers
of these areas. The industry is, as we well know, mainly
concentrated in Quebec.
(1335)
I could have spoken about unemployment insurance as well, as
many of my colleagues have done, about making use of a $5 billion
surplus, year after year, instead of making less of a cut to the
benefits paid to the unemployed or to the amounts workers and
employers have to pay into the fund, thus injecting more money
into the economy and trying to make use of it to revive
employment,
Employment was a recurring theme during the campaign, but
there is no sign of government action on it between campaigns.
This creates a problem, and it is something I hear about constantly
from the people in my riding. It worries them a great deal to see
that employment is being taxed, because the surplus is being
tapped year after year. That $5 billion represents a lot of money
that could have been put to another use, instead of reducing the
deficit with it.
These are the elements in the budget on which I wished to speak,
the ones I see as the most negative. There are also a number of
measures that are not bad, but I am sure that the hon. members
across the way will enjoy listing them, so I decided to concentrate
essentially on those three.
Mr. Jean-Paul Marchand (Québec-Est, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I
am pleased to rise in this debate on the latest federal budget, which
smells suspiciously like an election budget, because the measures it
contains are not particularly heavy or harsh. We could even say the
budget was a sort of pacifier for Canadians, except perhaps for the
cuts to the dairy subsidies-a flagrant injustice to Quebecers and
milk producers.
Apart from this injustice, the latest budget could be called an
electoral budget to mollify Canadians, in preparation for elections
this fall or next spring perhaps. The most difficult measures have
already been put into effect, in the previous two budgets. When the
Liberal government was elected three years ago, the government
was widely known to have a big problem, that of the debt and the
deficit. They have reached $550 billion and have even been
predicted by department and government statistics to go over $600
billion by the year 2000.
It is a huge problem. It is Canada's major problem, which the
Liberal government undertook to resolve. It is so serious that
Canada has the highest debt in the world in terms of its gross
domestic product apart from Italy. Canada has already been warned
of the precariousness of its position by the International Monetary
Fund. There are leaks everywhere. Technically, we could even say
that Canada is bankrupt, so to speak.
This is all to say that the problem of the deficit and the debt is
extremely complex, severe and serious. What have the Liberal
members done since their election three years ago? Not much.
They could have done a lot. They could, for example, have reduced
the number of senior officials, because there are a lot of them and
their salaries are very high and their expense accounts substantial.
There is a lot of waste here.
(1340)
The government has decided to reduce the number of public
servants by 45,000, mostly at the lower and middle levels.
Normally, some 15,000 public servants retire every year. This
certainly does not qualify as a major effort to reduce the size of the
public service. The federal government could have cut its spending
or at least contained its losses.
As a former member of the public works committee, I know that
there are many loopholes for federal funds to slip through,
contracts being one of them. Some $10 billion a year is spent on
contracts. There is a great deal of abuse and waste in this area. So
far, the government has not done much to close these loopholes.
Even the auditor general's numerous recommendations were not
taken into consideration in the government's previous budget
measures. Senate spending was not cut. Senators' pay could have
been reduced to $1 a year rather than the thousands of dollars they
receive for doing nothing. The Senate costs Canadians $50 million.
This is a rather shameless waste of Canadian taxpayers' money.
The government could have made significant cuts to its defence
spending. DND's budget exceeds $12 billion a year. The Somalia
affair and other recent events clearly show that DND is not the
most effective of federal government departments. Had the Liberal
government been seriously committed to reducing the federal debt
and deficit, it could certainly have cut the defence budget by
several billions of dollars.
It could have tightened up tax measures for corporations. As we
know, tax evasion in Canada represents between $3 billion and $4
billion. Corporations shelter their profits in countries like the
Caribbean islands to avoid paying taxes. Canada's losses due to tax
evasion are estimated at $3 billion to $4 billion. The federal
government did not act in this area either.
1456
Another option would have been for the government to crack
down harder on the banks. Last year alone, banks made $5.2
billion in profits, record profits, but this government, the Liberal
government, collected from the six chartered banks something like
$100 million over two years, which represents less than one per
cent of their net profits.
The government could also have imposed restrictions or made
other changes to family trusts. Again, this is an especially
interesting case, in that family trusts benefit the wealthy, Canadian
families which are fabulously rich. The Minister of Finance
himself is one of the fabulously rich Canadians who can invest
their net profits in family trusts to avoid paying taxes for
generations and generations. Because of such trusts Canada's
wealthiest families avoid paying taxes altogether.
It is estimated that taxation is avoided on nearly $100 billion
through family trusts. The federal government could have collected
taxes on family trusts to help resolve its very serious debt and
deficit problem.
(1345)
I have just listed nine measures this government could have
taken to reduce its debt, but it did not see fit to act in those areas.
Instead, the government decided to act in two well-known areas. It
is worth repeating because it reflects the basic thinking of this
Liberal government. It very clearly shows that, in Canada, the rich,
the wealthy are spared while the most vulnerable are hard hit.
The only two measures taken by this government to reduce its
deficit and its debt were to cut transfer payments to the provinces
by a few billion dollars, some $7 billion, by the year 2000. As we
know, these transfer cuts will affect education by reducing funds
available for education purposes. This means that Canadian youth
are directly affected. Health transfers are cut, which means that the
sick will be affected.
The other measure soon to be announced concerns changes, cuts
to old age pensions, which, as we already know, will affect mostly
senior women. Cutting transfers to the provinces is a measure
designed to leave the provinces holding the baby by giving the
impression that they are the ones making cuts.
The measure to be taken in another area, namely unemployment
insurance, is perhaps the most outrageous measure this government
has ever taken. It is actually asking the unemployed to contribute to
the debt reduction effort. Nothing less. Since 1990, the federal
government has not contributed a single dollar to the UI fund. The
money comes from the contributions of workers and employers.
The federal government does not contribute one penny to the fund.
Last year, the federal government took out about $5 billion from
the UI fund. It will do the same this year and next year. Over that
three-year period, $15 billion will have been taken out of the UI
fund and used to reduce the federal government's debt.
This is a disgrace because it is basically a misappropriation of
funds. The money in the UI fund should be used to provide training
programs for the jobless, but the government has other ideas. This
Liberal government is dishonest to the point of reducing the
amount that the unemployed can receive, setting tougher eligibility
criteria so that fewer people will qualify for UI benefits and, in
addition to that, misappropriating money from the UI fund and
using it to reduce the debt.
This is a dishonest and unfair measure which is tantamount to a
fraud. The government is defrauding those who contributed to the
fund, namely workers and employers. It is purely and simply a
fraud. That money was to be used for the benefit of the unemployed
and to provide training for workers. Instead, this government is
using it to reduce its debt.
(1350)
Of all the initiatives that it could have taken to reduce its debt
and its deficit, the government opted for two measures which
mainly seek to get money from the most vulnerable members of
our society, namely the unemployed, the sick, young people and
women, while protecting rich people, family trusts, banks and
corporations.
In conclusion, this series of measures spread over a three-year
period clearly show the spirit of that Liberal government, which
seeks to spare the rich and to hit the most vulnerable ones in our
society.
Mr. Ronald J. Duhamel (St. Boniface, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, first
of all, I have a few comments to make. I wonder how my colleague
would define the words ``dishonest'' and ``fraud''. What does he
think they mean? Is he prepared to make these kinds of accusations
outside the House of Commons?
I only have one question for him. What does he think his cousins
now in power in Quebec, his former leader, will cut when the time
comes for a budget in his province? Does he think that the
organizations that he mentioned earlier this morning and that were
supposedly treated so badly by the Canadian government will be
cut, yes or no?
Mr. Marchand: Mr. Speaker, there is no question that the way
the federal government used the unemployment insurance fund is
tantamount to a fraud. It is a fraud to use this fund for purposes
other than what it is usually used for. It is a misappropriation of
public funds. The money employees and employers put in the
unemployment insurance fund is supposed to be used for
unemployment insurance purposes. It is not all that complicated.
The unemployed are either compensated by directly receiving
unemployment insurance benefits or by taking part in training
programs. This is why the unemployment insurance fund was set
up in the first place.
1457
When the money is used for purposes other than to help the
unemployed, it is called fraud. It is dishonest. We are lying to the
Canadian citizens, to employees and employers. They are asked to
contribute to a fund which is not used to meet their needs, so it is a
misappropriation of funds. I do not think we can be any clearer
over the fact that the government is guilty of fraud, since it is
misappropriating public funds. We, in Quebec, are at least honest
enough to avoid all the hypocrisy shown here by the current Liberal
government.
Mr. Nick Discepola (Parliamentary Secretary to Solicitor
General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, since the Bloc's arrival on
the Hill, for the past two and half years or so in particular, they
have been singing just one song: tax loopholes, trusts, big business.
I must point out that, when the entire issue of family trusts was
examined, the Bloc's minority report had no suggestion whatsoever
for another way of dealing with them.
As well, when we ask the Bloc to offer concrete suggestions on
how to bring the $45 billion deficit down to zero, they always tell
us to go after the $6 billion in bad debts.
(1355)
Everyone knows that there is no long term reduction to be found
in bad debts, only a short term one for the year involved.
Procedures have been established for debt recovery.
A surtax has also been levied on financial institutions. The hon.
member talks of our dipping into the unemployment insurance
fund. This I find totally unacceptable, particularly in a context
where, with the possible exception of this year, Quebec has
received more from the unemployment insurance fund than it has
contributed.
What I want to ask the hon. member is this: Is it not prudent, in a
recession, to always create a reserve so as to avoid additional
burden on the government? During a recession, we all know social
programs increase, thus increasing the burden, and revenues
decrease.
I therefore find it unbelievable that the Bloc members keep on
telling us we must not touch the $5 billion in the reserve we have
created. The precise reason for creating a reserve fund is to avoid a
potential recession. Is that not prudent?
Mr. Marchand: Mr. Speaker, perhaps I should have spoken
English, because I do not seem to make myself understood in
French. Of course it is obvious. You would have to be nearly blind
not to recognize that the government is using the money from the
unemployment insurance fund fraudulently. In other words, this
money is not being used for unemployment insurance but for
federal deficit reduction. It is a fraud. It is dishonest-there is no
other way to put it.
When they say, as my colleague has just pointed out, that the
Bloc has not proposed practical measures to reduce the deficit, I
would point out that, on the matter of family trusts, the Bloc
suggested they simply be abolished. Some $100 billion is in family
trusts in Canada. This money is not taxed. It is set aside for the
wealthiest families, the super rich, which includes the Minister of
Finance. That was one of the suggestions we made. In fact, I made
eight this morning the government has not acted on.
So, the hon. member's repeating the Liberal government's
harebrained, hypocritical and dishonest ideology does not stop me
from seeing clearly that unemployment insurance funds are being
used fraudulently and that the Liberal government has neither the
backbone nor the guts to resolve its finances as it could have done
had it really wanted to.
_____________________________________________
1457
STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
[
English]
Mr. Jay Hill (Prince George-Peace River, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, 1996 is a watershed year for the town of Mackenzie in my
riding.
Unfortunately it is not positive. Due to the inaction of the
government, the residents of this small, isolated community
nestled in the Rockies have lost their northern living allowance.
Why are the residents of Mackenzie discriminated against while
thousands of people living in cities further south still qualify?
1996 also marks the 10th anniversary of spring weight
restrictions for trucks travelling the Alaska highway to Yukon. The
continued imposition of the 75 per cent load restriction is unfair
and costly to trucking companies and northern residents.
Millions of resource dollars flow out of our region and little is
put back. Like the Trans-Labrador highway, the Alaska highway is
not even finished yet. Northerners in my riding are fed up with their
needs being ignored by the government.
When will the government recognize that the north is a vital part
of Canada's economy?
* * *
(1400 )
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, last month was designated as Learning Disabilities
Month. There is not a lot of recognition paid to learning disabili-
1458
ties even though one in ten or 2.9 million Canadians have this type
of disability.
Learning disabilities are permanent disorders which affect the
way individuals with normal or above normal intelligence receive,
store, organize, retrieve and use information. These difficulties
show up in five distinct areas: visual, auditory, motor,
organizational and conceptual. Such difficulties extend to school,
work, social functions and employment and can impede learning to
read, to write or to do mathematics.
We can help to increase public awareness of learning disabilities
by talking about them whenever there is an opportunity and
educating the public to help these individuals live a fuller more
productive life.
* * *
Mr. Andy Mitchell (Parry Sound-Muskoka, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I rise today to acknowledge and thank the many
constituents in my riding who took the time to take part in a public
pension forum I held in Rosseau last week.
Close to 70 people turned out to provide me with their
comments, concerns and ideas about how to improve Canada's
public pension system so that it will be affordable, fair and
sustainable for future generations of Canadians.
My constituents invested their time and energy to learn about
options to change the Canada pension plan and the details of the
proposed new seniors benefit. They considered and suggested
potential solutions. They participated in round table discussions
with their peers and put forth recommendations that I will in turn
forward to the ministers of finance and human resources
development for consideration in future deliberations.
I thank my constituents for their valuable interventions on the
subject of public pensions. I encourage them to keep coming
forward with their thoughts and ideas.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, even after being distorted and robbed of any meaning in
an attempt to sell it to English Canada as a meaningless concept
that would give Quebec no additional powers, the concept of
distinct society is still too much for federal Liberals.
This became obvious last weekend when the Quebec wing of the
Liberal Party of Canada tried to kill the distinct society concept and
replace it by stating the obvious and recognizing Quebec as the
principal homeland of French language, culture and legal tradition
in North America.
The Liberal Party of Canada, led by the Minister of
Intergovernmental Affairs, is acting in an arrogant and provocative
manner toward the people of Quebec by proposing nothing more
than a simple acknowledgement of a fact that has been recognized
since the 1760 conquest.
If this is the proposed reconciliation plan, the government is not
taking the people of Quebec seriously or treating them with
respect. It is reneging on the promises made in Verdun during the
last referendum and, when the time comes, the people of Quebec
will remember.
* * *
[
English]
Mrs. Rose-Marie Ur (Lambton-Middlesex, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, April is Parkinson's Awareness Month as proclaimed by
the Parkinson Foundation of Canada.
Since its formation in 1965 the foundation has been devoted to
the support of research into the cause, treatment and cure of
Parkinson's disease, a chronic brain disorder suffered by
approximately 100,000 Canadians.
Through the various chapters of the Parkinson Foundation of
Canada, a number of fundraising events are being planned across
Canada to raise money for research, to promote public education
and to develop patient and family support services.
Each April the beautiful red and white Dr. James Parkinson tulip,
the official symbol of Parkinson's, is sold to the general public and
businesses. One of the selling days coincides with Secretary's Day
on April 24. Other fundraising events include a national cut-a-thon
on the last Sunday in April in which hair salons across Canada offer
their time and talent for a small donation.
I encourage all Canadians to do their part in contributing to the
search for a cure for Parkinson's disease.
* * *
Mr. Lee Morrison (Swift Current-Maple
Creek-Assiniboia, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, on March 1 the Minister
of Foreign Affairs praised my position in the Haiti debate, but a
few days later when I questioned his ministerial actions with
respect to Haitian peacekeeping and aid to China he reverted to
form and accused me of isolationism. I do not know which I find
most offensive: praise from that particular minister or his personal
attack.
1459
The minister should understand that Canadian support for the
UN in Haiti does not mean being a doormat and that Canadian
trade with China does not require an annual foreign aid bribe of
$162 million. Nor do relations with China require our Export
Development Corporation to provide financial assistance for the
Three Gorges project, a grandiose boondoggle which will displace
1.25 million people.
* * *
(1405)
[Translation]
Mr. Ronald J. Duhamel (St. Boniface, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, after
more than three hours of debate, the rank and file of the Liberal
Party of Canada in Quebec passed a very important resolution on
national unity and cohesion.
This resolution reaffirms with great conviction and sensibility
our government's main commitments on national unity. Among
other things, federal Liberals in Quebec stated in clause 1.4 of the
resolution that the Liberal Party of Canada supports enshrining in
the Constitution the principles recognized in the December 1995
parliamentary resolution defining distinct society.
This shows once again the great synergy and ideological
cohesion between the rank and file of the Liberal Party of Canada
in Quebec and the Liberal government on issues as fundamental as
Quebec's place within Canada.
* * *
Mrs. Pauline Picard (Drummond, BQ): Mr. Speaker, the
announcement that the Textiles Monterey mill will reopen is
another indication of the vitality and entrepreneurship of the people
of Drummond. Last September, 270 jobs were lost after the
company declared bankruptcy. In just six months, a group of
former employees, both managers and workers, came up with a
business proposal to acquire the company's assets and to specialize
the new company's production.
The reopening of Textiles Monterey is the fruit of the
collaborative efforts and great determination of all stakeholders:
the employees, the union, the financial institutions, the FTQ
solidarity fund, and the three levels of government. The success of
this operation stems from the establishment of a financial network
and, above all, a dialogue between local resources.
On behalf of all my fellow citizens of Drummond, I wish every
success to the shareholders of the new Textiles Monterey company.
[English]
Hon. Audrey McLaughlin (Yukon, NDP): Mr. Speaker, the
Liberal government has said it wishes to support small businesses,
but wishes are not policies.
The performance of Canada Post in the north continues to make
it more and more difficult especially for publishing businesses
which are a small but a vital part of the economy both in the Yukon
and Northwest Territories.
In December publishers were notified one week before a price
change occurred. Certainly promotional material could not be sent
out and the publisher was left to absorb extra costs. Also in
December Canada Post put ads in a number of newspapers but not
in the north regarding mandate review. Finally, publishers have
recently been informed by Canada Post that there will be a
substantial price increase in the coming years.
Clearly publishing is extremely important to the north as a vital
business. I call on the minister responsible for heritage to meet
with the minister for Canada Post to save this emerging northern
cultural business.
* * *
Mr. Reg Alcock (Winnipeg South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, today I
rise to recognize the efforts of a large number of volunteers who
support the St. Norbert Arts and Cultural Centre.
The centre is built in an old Trappist monastery that was the
centre of the Metis culture during the Red River rebellion. The
centre has now been completely refurbished. Thanks to the
activities of a large number of people in my riding, it has become
home to an international arts and cultural centre. Artists from all
over the world are invited to live in residence and work on projects
that are enriching the cultural life of this country.
I simply wish to recognize the efforts of these many volunteers.
* * *
Mr. Harbance Singh Dhaliwal (Vancouver South, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I rise in the House today in memory of the nine members
of the Gakhal family of Vernon, British Columbia whose lives were
taken in the brutal and senseless massacre on April 5.
As a young and energetic couple filled with hopes and dreams,
Mr. and Mrs. Gakhal came to Canada in 1970 with their two eldest
daughters. They had lived in Vernon for over 20 years. The Gakhals
1460
were contributing members of society and active participants in
community life.
This Canadian family was well liked and respected. On Saturday
more than 2,000 people attended their funeral service to pay their
last respects.
Like many other Canadian families, the Gakhals worked hard to
create a good and comfortable life for their family. Karnail and
Darshan Gakhal were loving and devoted parents. They dedicated
themselves to raising their six beautiful children. They taught their
children appreciation of values, principles and the importance of
contributing to their community. The Gakhals were close and
loving.
(1410)
Today I ask all my colleagues to stand in a moment of silence in
memory of the Gakhal family, the second worst tragedy in
Canadian history.
[Editor's Note: The House stood in silence.]
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Paul Mercier (Blainville-Deux-Montagnes, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, more than a week ago, Kenworth's management
announced its decision to shut down operations at its truck
manufacturing plant in Sainte-Thérèse. More than 850 directs jobs
are jeopardized by this announcement.
As we speak, almost all concerned are actively trying to prevent
the closure of this important plant and to save 850 jobs. But the
federal government has yet to take positive steps in this important
issue.
Time is of the essence, and I might remind the government that it
takes more than wishful thinking to prevent the 850 jobs at
Kenworth's from moving to Mexico or to the U.S.
In its speech from the throne and its budget, the government
boasted about putting job creation first. It should therefore get
directly involved in the Kenworth matter and co-operate with the
Quebec government in finding a solution, thus preventing the
plant's closure.
* * *
[
English]
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, we have recently learned of exorbitant amounts paid by
the Red Cross to Krever Commission witnesses. The Red Cross is
supported in part by taxpayer dollars.
We have also learned that the federal government is providing
free legal representation for two former ministers involved in this
tragedy, while a mere pittance is thrown to the legal requirements
of the victims.
These revelations further darken a shadow cast by a growing
legacy of mismanagement. This shadow continues to obscure the
truth. Sadly, similar scenarios are all too much a part of the
continuing Ottawa inquiry process.
And where is the health minister? Instead of safeguarding the
mandate of the inquiry, along with others he challenges its
legitimacy. Instead of protecting the health of Canadians through
an improved blood system, he protects the interests of those who
are part of the system that failed.
Two fundamentals are at stake here: the principle of government
accountability and the goal of assured health for all Canadians. The
minister must change his course of action to safeguard both this
principle and this goal.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Robert Bertrand (Pontiac-Gatineau-Labelle, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, during their discussions this past weekend, the
members of the general council of the Liberal party of Canada in
Quebec decided to support the claims of those who promote the
consumption of raw milk products.
Moreover, the LPCQ is asking the federal government to
withdraw its proposed regulations to prohibit the import and export
of raw milk products. These products represent a new and very
promising market for Quebec's agricultural sector.
It would be a pity not to let Quebec producers of raw milk
products develop their full potential merely because of fear. This is
why I join the militant wing of the LPCQ in asking the withdrawal
of these draft regulations.
* * *
[
English]
The Deputy Speaker: I draw the attention of hon. members to
the presence in the gallery of His Excellency Mr. Qiao Shi,
Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress of the People's Republic of China.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
1461
(1415 )
The Deputy Speaker: Colleagues, I have the honour to inform
the House that the Clerk of the House has received from the Chief
Electoral Officer a certificate of the election and return of Mr.
Gerry Byrne, member for the electoral district of Humber-St.
Barbe-Baie Verte.
* * *
Mr. Gerry Byrne, member for the electoral district of
Humber-St. Barbe-Baie Verte, introduced by the Right Hon.
Jean Chrétien and the Hon. Fred Mifflin.
* * *
The Deputy Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House
that the Clerk of the House has received from the Chief Electoral
Officer a certificate of the election and return of Mr. Roy Cullen,
member for the electoral district of Etobicoke North.
* * *
Mr. Roy Cullen, member for the electoral district of Etobicoke
North, introduced by the Right Hon. Jean Chrétien and the Hon.
David Collenette.
* * *
[
Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House
that the Clerk of the House has received from the Chief Electoral
Officer a certificate of the election and return of Mr. Stéphane
Dion, member for the electoral district of
Saint-Laurent-Cartierville.
* * *
Stéphane Dion, member for the electoral district of
Saint-Laurent-Cartierville, introduced by the Right Hon. Jean
Chrétien and the Hon. Marcel Massé.
* * *
(1420)
[English]
The Deputy Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House
that the Clerk of the House has received from the Chief Electoral
Officer a certificate of the election and return of Mr. Lawrence D.
O'Brien, member for the electoral district of Labrador.
* * *
Lawrence D. O'Brien, member for the electoral district of
Labrador, introduced by the Hon. Jean Chrétien and Hon. Fred
Mifflin.
* * *
[
Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House
that the Clerk of the House has received from the Chief Electoral
Officer a certificate of the election and return of Mr. Pierre S.
Pettigrew, member for the electoral district of
Papineau-Saint-Michel.
* * *
Pierre S. Pettigrew, member for the electoral district of
Papineau-Saint-Michel, introduced by the Right Hon. Jean
Chrétien and the Hon. Alfonso Gagliano.
* * *
The Deputy Speaker: I have the honour to inform the House
that the Clerk of the House has received from the Chief Electoral
Officer a certificate of the election and return of Mr. Stéphan
Tremblay, member for the electoral district of Lac-Saint-Jean.
* * *
Stéphan Tremblay, member for the electoral district of
Lac-Saint-Jean, introduced by Mr. Michel Gauthier and Mrs.
Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral.
_____________________________________________
1461
ORAL QUESTION PERIOD
(1425)
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I am delighted to see the Prime Minister in this House,
because things are going badly for the government. Parallelling the
unprecedented scandal in the Canadian army, which we will return
to later, is the scandal involving the Prime Minister who reneges on
his promises.
This weekend, at the meeting of the Liberal Party, the Prime
Minister made an about-face. He changed the commitments he
made in Verdun only a few days before the referendum. His
1462
promise to recognize Quebec as a distinct society was trampled
underfoot, tossed out with a wave of the hand after a night of work
and the undebated passing of a resolution on the floor of the
meeting.
How can the Prime Minister justify not keeping his word to the
people of Quebec and once again reneging on the commitments he
made in Verdun?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, we made a commitment to have the distinct society
recognized in this House and we met it in December. All the
members on this side of the House voted in favour, and the
members of the Bloc voted against. This is the fourth time they
have voted against a distinct society.
We support the distinct society. We support having all Canadians
recognize that the French fact, French culture and French civil law
have special significance for Quebec. And we will continue to fight
for this. It would be very helpful to have the support of the Bloc in
having this fact recognized. However, today, as always, those who
voted against the Meech Lake accord are weeping crocodile tears.
And yet, when you yourself were a member in Quebec City, you
voted against the distinct society in the Charlottetown accord and
you voted against the distinct society as late as last December.
If the Leader of the Opposition is serious, I issue him the
following challenge: let him propose a vote in this House on the
distinct society, and we will support him.
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, as a simple resolution at a meeting of the Liberal Party is
enough to overturn the resolution passed in this House, of which
the Prime Minister was allegedly so proud, and since a simple
resolution of the meeting of the Liberal Party is enough to void the
commitments made in the throne speech, are we to understand that
the government and the Liberal Party consider the commitments
not worth the paper they are written on?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, if the Bloc Quebecois and the Parti Quebecois want to
help us enshrine the distinct society in the Canadian Constitution, I
am sure we can do it. But, how can we insist on or hold a
federal-provincial conference on the distinct society when the
leader of the Parti Quebecois, the premier of Quebec, asks us not to
put it on the order paper before the Canadian premiers?
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the Prime Minister is not going to alter the debate. It was
he, at his meeting, who reneged on the commitments he made as
Prime Minister. He cannot shift people's attention today.
I will say simply that, once again, our fine Prime Minister has
managed to turn all of Quebec against him.
(1430)
How can he reconcile his new constitutional position with the
remarks made this very morning by his referendum ally, Daniel
Johnson, who said on behalf of Quebec federalists that he is totally
opposed to the position the Prime Minister is now taking?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I would simply like to read clause 1.4 of the resolution
passed this weekend by party officials in Quebec and the members
of the Liberal Party in Quebec who want the fact incorporated in
the Constitution. Here is the text that was passed and that the
Leader of the Opposition has obviously not read: ``The Liberal
Party of Canada supports the enshrinement in the Constitution of
the principles recognized in the Parliamentary resolution passed in
December 1995 defining the distinct society''.
There is the answer for the hon. member, who, if he were a little
more honest with himself and with the people of Quebec-
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice): Indeed, he would tell the people
of Quebec that he has always voted against recognition of Quebec
as a distinct society, whereas we Liberals have always worked to
achieve this end.
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Intergovernmental
Affairs.
At the general membership meeting of the Quebec wing of the
Liberal Party, the minister stated in connection with the place
Quebec holds within Canadian federation that the words
themselves were of no importance, what counts is the reality.
Well then, can the minister tell us whether, in his reality,
Quebecers constitute a people?
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
Hon. Stéphane Dion (President of the Queen's Privy Council
for Canada and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, this is the first question asked of me as a member of
Parliament, and I must thank the hon. member for it.
Anyone wishing to properly describe public opinion in Quebec is
obliged to admit it is not a society in unanimity, but a society where
various opinions are voiced. The best way to illustrate this is with a
poll that came out a week before the referendum. Quebecers were
asked how they defined themselves. Twenty-five per cent said they
defined themselves as Quebecers only, and all the rest defined
themselves as Canadians, many of them as Quebecers first, because
they felt more at home in Quebec, but Canadians also.
These people are Canadians. The hon. member would like them
to stop being Canadians, and that is where the problem lies. The
answer is this: in Quebec we have differing opinions, but the large
1463
majority of Quebecers want to remain in Canada. We are going to
work to ensure that everyone in Canada may be reconciled.
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): It
would have been far wiser, Mr. Speaker, for the Liberals to find out
what the minister's answer was before applauding.
Is the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs not demonstrating
through his reply that, just like the Prime Minister, he has
absolutely no grasp of the Quebec reality?
Hon. Stéphane Dion (President of the Queen's Privy Council
for Canada and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, I am not much versed in how things are done here, but
if I understand the hon. member correctly, he wishes me to repeat
what I said, because he did not understand it fully.
An hon. member: That is right.
Mr. Dion: I thought I had been very clear. We have a pluralistic
society in Quebec, one in which a number of different points of
view are expressed, one in which people need to be left to define
themselves as they wish. Some wish to define themselves as
primarily Quebecers, others as primarily Canadians, and what is so
wonderful in Canadian federation is that no one forces anything on
anyone else.
* * *
(1435)
[English]
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, this
morning's revelations in the growing Somalia cover-up are deeply
disturbing.
Documents from Two Commando Unit have miraculously
reappeared in a Petawawa filing cabinet. Vital operational logs
from One Commando were apparently the victim of a Mogadishu
mud puddle or Somalia sea water, and the RCMP is now examining
DND's tampered with hard drive for electronic fingerprints.
Given all of this, how could the Prime Minister still have full
confidence in the chief of the defence staff and his own Minister of
National Defence?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, it is because I have known the Minister of National
Defence for a long time. He is a very good man and a very
competent minister.
When he became minister he was confronted with a file that was
created before the coming of this administration. He has worked
with this problem and he has decided to do something
unprecedented: to have an inquiry into the operation of national
defence. Not only that, but he recommended that we disband the
regiment that was involved in that.
He took some extremely courageous actions and he has decided
this inquiry will go to the bottom of the file, a file that was started
perhaps by an incompetent administration before we arrived.
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, this
trouble may have started before but what we need is for this
minister to truly get to the bottom of it and clear it up once and for
all.
The lawyers for the Somalia inquiry were quite clear in who they
think is responsible for this whole mess: the Somalia inquiry
liaison team, the public affairs division of DND and this Liberal
government.
The lawyers did not say that General Jean Boyle is the common
link between all three of these problem areas. He had a hand in
SILT and he headed up public affairs at DND before he was hand
picked for this current position by this minister.
Will the defence minister ask his friend, General Jean Boyle, to
step aside until the Somalia inquiry gets to the bottom of his role in
this attempted cover-up?
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I certainly will
not ask the chief of the defence staff to step aside.
It seems the members of the Reform Party are intent on making
accusations, not allowing individuals to state their cases before the
commission and drawing their own conclusions. This is foreign to
Canadian justice which has served us well for over a century as a
nation.
I think the inquiry process is working. The chairman of the
commission has noted a problem with documentation and has set
aside a couple of weeks to look at this specific issue and hopefully
will draw some conclusions.
If it is apparent, as the chairman said, that outside help, whether
the military police or the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, should
be involved, that is the job of the commission to identify.
I cannot reply every day to accusations that come forward at the
commission. That is why we set up the commission, to take it out
of the political arena and put it where it belongs, in front of three
independent people to evaluate the facts.
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, there
are a lot of people who do want to state their cases. Instead they
have been stifled, which is the unfortunate part of this whole thing.
I guess it is easier to blame subordinates than it is to fire a hand
picked appointee. If this minister had done his job the military
brass would not be leading him around by the nose. If this minister
had done his job, General Boyle would not even have been named
1464
chief of defence staff. If this minister had truly done his job the
Somalia inquiry would not be scrambling around looking for
operational logs and missing documents.
Since the minister is obviously incapable of doing his job and
has lost the confidence of absolutely everybody but the military
brass, will he resign?
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I think the
Prime Minister has dealt with that on a number of occasions.
This has been a particularly troublesome file for all of us in
government. The Department of National Defence is under
instructions to make all documents available to the commission.
There have been some problems. I welcome the commission's
deciding to set aside these two weeks to look at the documentation
problem.
Obviously by what has transpired this morning the commission
still requires further answers. Departmental officials will give
those answers. However, it is very important that individuals,
whether the chief of defence staff or others who have been named
publicly by the Reform Party or others in the media, have an
opportunity to go to the commission, state their own case and be
judged in the eyes of all Canadians fairly and justly because that is
what Canadian justice is all about.
* * *
(1440)
[Translation]
Mr. Jean-Marc Jacob (Charlesbourg, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Prime Minister.
Contrary to what the minister just said, the commission
adjourned this morning because it was dissatisfied with the level of
co-operation from the Department of National Defence and the
minister himself. This is unacceptable.
Does the Prime Minister feel his defence minister is still
trustworthy despite his lack of co-operation in the Somalia inquiry
and the fact that the minister himself had General Boyle appointed
to the position of Chief of the Defence Staff, supposedly to restore
public trust?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the minister asked the department to co-operate with the
commission. Furthermore, he himself created the commission and
recommended that an independent commission be established to
review this whole matter.
This is obviously a complex matter that was-
Some hon. members: Ah, ah.
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice): Yes, it is complex. It happened
before we formed the government, and the party in power had
trouble dealing with this matter. After disbanding the regiment
involved in these operations, the minister decided to request that a
fully independent commission be established to review this whole
matter.
All requested documents will be made available to the
commission, and all those concerned are doing their utmost to
honour the commission's requests, especially the minister, in
whom I have full confidence.
Mr. Jean-Marc Jacob (Charlesbourg, BQ): Mr. Speaker,
contrary to what the Prime Minister just said, the existence of the
files was known when the Conservative Party was in power.
General John Anderson said so.
They keep saying that they still trust the minister and General
Boyle, when everyone has lost confidence in the Canadian Forces.
It could be said that, as recently as last weekend, the whole world
was making fun of Canada because of the search for documents
ordered by the minister.
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the search for
documents was a very important exercise for the Canadian Forces.
I think it shows that the members of the Canadian Forces are
willing to co-operate with the commission.
The hon. member across the way has accused the Chief of the
Defence Staff of committing offenses, even though the CDS has
not had the opportunity to share his views with the commission.
This is not how the Canadian justice system works.
[English]
Mr. Jim Hart (Okanagan-Similkameen-Merritt, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of National Defence.
In October 1995 the military police reported that its inquiry on
the divergence of information provided to the Somali inquiry could
not conclude due to a missing hard drive computer disk. The
minister deemed it unnecessary to go further to find the missing
hard drive disk.
How is it that the Minister of National Defence did not recognize
the significance of what the military police explained to him
regarding the missing disk?
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the hon.
member will remember that about a year or so ago in the House I
said that when the commission was set up all relevant documents
would be made available to the commission. The department has
tried to meet the expectations that were made of it to provide those
documents.
It is quite apparent that there have been some problems with the
documents that appear to be missing. The department has given
certain explanations. In fact, the chief of defence staff initiated a
1465
search last week which turned up further documents that are now
being analysed by the commission.
When the hon. member implies that we did not take the search
for documents seriously, that is not true. Even as late as last week,
to assist the commission this week in its exercise to look at the
documents, it was the department that asked the RCMP computer
experts to come in and assist it with respect to those deficiencies
relating to the computers.
Mr. Jim Hart (Okanagan-Similkameen-Merritt, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, the minister's actions speak much louder than his
words.
The minister did not provide the Somali inquiry with the military
police report, such an important document, until four months after
the minister had accepted it.
(1445 )
It would seem that General Boyle had to be appointed to the
position of chief of defence staff because anyone else would have
deemed it necessary to go further and get to the bottom of why the
hard disk and certain records were missing.
My question is for the Prime Minister. Does the Prime Minister
not see that this one event alone is so serious that clearly the
Minister of National Defence and the chief of defence staff,
General Boyle, must resign?
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the hon.
member has shown once again how selective he is with the facts.
I would rather listen to the commission counsel who this
morning raised some further concerns and asked the department to
provide answers by this Thursday. I would prefer to wait until next
Monday when a certain hearing can be started on the public affairs
aspect of the problem so that the chief of defence staff and others
can state their case.
It does not serve us well every day in the House to rehash the
accusations, the comments that come from the commission. That is
why the commission was established, to remove it from Parliament
to let an independent group take the appropriate action and review
this in the clear light of day.
[Translation]
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the situation continues to deteriorate. Even before really
getting down to business, the Somalia inquiry commission is
exposing a most serious situation. Not only is what took place in
Somalia unacceptable, the whole situation within the Canadian
forces high command and the Department of National Defence is
intolerable.
Does the Prime Minister agree that the government must order a
much more wide-ranging inquiry to consider all the blunders made
by the Canadian Armed Forces and the whole cover-up?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the mandate of the commission allows its members to
examine all issues relating to these incidents and they definitely
intend to do so.
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the commission should also look at what happened in
Petawawa, at the hazing rituals, at what happened in Gagetown, at
what happened with the pseudo-terrorist attack at the Quebec City
Citadel, following which the commander of the Citadel was
appointed chief of the armed forces in Haiti. This is quite
something. Talk about being irresponsible.
Does the Prime Minister realize that his government is
tarnishing the reputation of the Canadian Armed Forces and that
this will continue as long as the current defence minister is in
charge?
[English]
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am quite
affronted that the hon. member would accuse the government of
tarnishing the image of the armed forces. If anything is tarnishing
the image of the armed forces, other than the problems we have to
deal with on an ongoing basis, it is the attitude of the members
opposite who are making political points on the backs of the men
and women who serve with distinction in the Canadian Armed
Forces.
* * *
Mr. Bob Ringma (Nanaimo-Cowichan, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
in welcoming the intergovernmental affairs minister to his seat, I
note that some time ago he indicated that a distinct society clause
in the Constitution would not confer special status on Quebec and I
quote: ``It is an insult to suggest Quebecers would use the clause to
trample minority rights''.
Canadians familiar with Quebec's oppressive language laws fear
a distinct society clause would be used to further the exclusionary
policies of separatists.
For the benefit of Canadians, will the minister clarify his
intentions about including a distinct society clause in the
Constitution?
Hon. Stéphane Dion (Saint-Laurent-Cartierville, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, we must state the facts.
Since the beginning, since 1988, the intent to put in the
Constitution the recognition of Quebec has never been a device to
change the distribution of powers in the Constitution of Canada.
1466
(1450 )
Never. Some politicians who do not want to reconcile Quebecers
and Canadians may say that but it is not the truth. I will give you
what was written in 1987, the first draft the first ministers accepted
in order to keep Quebec as a distinct society, or any other term you
want to use within Canada.
``Nothing in this section derogates from the powers, rights or
privileges of Parliament or the Government of Canada or the
legislatures of the governments of the provinces, including any
powers, rights or privileges relating to language''. This is why it
would be a lie to say that it may change the distribution of powers.
It is an interpretative clause. It is necessary but it does not change
the basic Constitution.
Mr. Bob Ringma (Nanaimo-Cowichan, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
do not know how much Canadians will be cheered by that 1987
response.
The intergovernmental affairs minister has also said that
Quebec's racist bill 101, the language law in Quebec, and I quote
him: ``A great Canadian law and is liberal in many ways.''
In many ways inclusion of distinct society has the legal potential
to allow for policies which will take away from the rights of
Canadians. I ask the minister if the inclusion of a distinct society
clause is necessary, what measures will the government take to
ensure that the clause will not undermine the equality of all
Canadians?
Hon. Stéphane Dion (Saint-Laurent-Cartierville, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, bilingual or trilingual democracies have measures to
ensure that their language communities will live together in
harmony. It is what we have in Canada. We are very proud of it.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Pauline Picard (Drummond, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of Health. The Canadian government
has just banned cheese made from raw milk. In Quebec, producers,
importers, retailers, restaurant owners, consumers, veterinarians
and the provincial government disagree with this decision. The
Quebec Liberal Party and even the Liberal Party of Canada also
disagree.
Since cheese made from raw milk is already strictly regulated in
Canada and nobody is complaining, why do the minister and his
officials want to annoy us by prohibiting the sale of this cheese
here?
[English]
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the hon. member has asked a very important question relating to
raw milk cheese. Evidence has come from my department which
suggests that there may be an increased risk of illness or disease.
As a result a regulation has been gazetted and for 75 days there
will be a period of consultation. After that consultation period we
will be in a position to evaluate the evidence which has been put
forward to see whether the evidence of the department is accurate.
[Translation]
Mrs. Pauline Picard (Drummond, BQ): Mr. Speaker, does the
Minister of Health have nothing better to do than to regulate in an
area where his officials are most unwelcome? Who is in charge, the
minister or his officials?
[English]
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I am tempted to say that the question is full of holes. However, I
want to remind the hon. member who has demonstrated time and
time again on the floor of the House of the Commons that she is a
reasonable individual that my responsibilities as the Minister of
Health are to protect the health of Canadians. When evidence
comes forward which suggests an increase in risk of the health of
Canadians, I must take the appropriate action.
(1455 )
Therefore, we have put in motion a process which is very
normal, a 75-day consultation period. Thereafter, the appropriate
decisions will be taken.
* * *
Hon. Charles Caccia (Davenport, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans. Section 35(2)
of the Fisheries Act deals with the protection of freshwater fish
habitat and is a fundamental pillar of environmental and fisheries
protection.
Can the minister of fisheries assure the House that the powers of
section 35(2) will not be delegated to the provincial governments?
Hon. Fred Mifflin (Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the hon. member for a very important
question. I also want to compliment him on the good work he
continues to do in environmental areas and for the tremendous
reputation he has for concerns in this area.
I would like to assure the hon. member that, as he quite rightly
points out, section 35(2) of the Fisheries Act is a very important
trigger for the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act.
I am pleased to report that while we may be looking at some
changes downstream which are necessary and important for fresh-
1467
water fish habitat, we will continue to ensure that the Fisheries Act
will be an important trigger for fish management.
* * *
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, while the
Canada pension plan consultations begin today, I have been talking
with seniors in my riding for the past two weeks and they are
worried.
The Minister of Finance said in his budget speech that the CPP
must be put on a sound financial footing that will make it
sustainable, affordable and fair.
My question is for the Deputy Prime Minister. Can the
government assure us that sustainable, affordable and fair will not
mean less money in the pockets of seniors?
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for the
question.
We have just begun a process of consultations with respect to the
Canada pension plan. We await with great interest the observations,
ideas and suggestions of Canadians on how to ensure the
sustainability of the plan.
The goal of the exercise is a sustainable program that will be
there for Canadians, not taking something out of the pockets of
Canadians.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, it is
interesting to note that the government is going to wait for the
outcome of these consultations. That is not leadership.
Today the Montreal Gazette quotes the member for Winnipeg
North Centre, who is the government's point man for the CPP road
show. In the article the member says that the government is
committed to protecting the fundamental part of Canada's overall
pension system. What does protection mean? Pay more and get less
or some other painful remedy?
My question is for the Deputy Prime Minister. What guarantee
does the government give seniors that it will maintain the standard
of living for seniors?
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, on one hand the member decries the
consultations, suggesting that it is not leadership. That is precisely
the kind of leadership Canadians want. They want to be heard.
They want a government that listens to their suggestions. That is
what we will do in the context of the CPP consultations.
[Translation]
Mr. Paul Mercier (Blainville-Deux-Montagnes, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Prime Minister.
Over a week ago, the management of the Kenworth plant in
Sainte-Thérèse announced its plans to shut down operations at the
truck manufacturing facility. Since then, all stakeholders have been
actively seeking to prevent this plant from closing and to save the
850 jobs at stake.
Could the Prime Minister tell this House what steps he intends to
take to save these 850 jobs?
Hon. Martin Cauchon (Secretary of State (Federal Office of
Regional Development-Quebec), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, you will
understand that the government is extremely concerned about the
announcement made by PACCAR. A substantial number of jobs are
at stake, and my hon. friend across the way should know that the
Canadian government has been involved in this matter from the
very beginning, after PACCAR made its decision known. The
Government of Quebec got involved and we immediately got on
board; we were represented by my colleague, the Minister of
Labour, who met with the president of the FTQ and also with his
provincial counterpart.
We have been in contact; members of my staff got in touch with
the minister responsible for the province of Quebec.
(1500)
Last Saturday, my colleague, the Minister of Labour, and myself
sat down with representatives of the union at the Sainte-Thérèse
plant. I must say that, as matters stand, we will consult with each
other. We will examine the matter on its merit and come back to the
House with the Canadian government's position on this matter.
Mr. Paul Mercier (Blainville-Deux-Montagnes, BQ): Here
is my supplementary, Mr. Speaker: Last Friday, the Government of
Quebec made a proposal to PACCAR, Kenworth's parent company,
in an attempt to prevent the closure of the Kenworth plant.
Since the Minister of Labour has announced that the federal
government will get involved in this matter, could the Prime
Minister undertake to support the proposal the Quebec government
made to PACCAR to save the Kenworth plant in Sainte-Thérèse?
Hon. Martin Cauchon (Secretary of State (Federal Office of
Regional Development-Quebec), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, as I said
already, the Canadian government is currently working on it. In
fact, the minister responsible for Quebec has sent a letter to
PACCAR. We are waiting for the company's response. Once we
have all the facts, we will let this House know what the Canadian
government's position is.
1468
[English]
Mrs. Daphne Jennings (Mission-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the minister of human resources.
This year's budget punishes seniors by reducing the RRSP age
limit for contributions from 71 to 69. Why impose this hardship on
seniors when they are now living longer and healthier lives and will
need their savings over a longer life span?
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, one of the hallmarks of the
budget brought in by my colleague, the Minister of Finance, was to
deal with problems such as the demographic change taking place in
this country and elsewhere in the most fair and equitable way.
I would have thought the hon. member would have made
reference to the fact that the proposals made by the Minister of
Finance allow for those people who wish to take advantage of
RRSPs to go back as far as they can to pick up those years where,
because of child rearing or for other reasons, they were unable to
make maximum contributions.
The proof is in the pudding. As one looks at the reactions across
the country to the proposals made by the Minister of Finance with
regard to RRSPs and other elements of the budget, they have all
been very well accepted by people who understand them.
Mrs. Daphne Jennings (Mission-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, the minister is still refusing to deal with the age
difference. By lowering it, he is really harming seniors. By
reducing the age of mandatory rollover from seniors' RRSPs, the
government will raise close to $100 million by the year 2000.
This is just another Liberal tax grab. Why does the minister not
have the courage to be frank with our seniors about what he is
doing and admit this is another tax grab at the expense of seniors?
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the challenge is always with
comprehension. There is no doubt about that.
What we are dealing with here is undoubtedly an effort to be
equitable. There is no question the hon. member has stated the
record in terms of the reduction to age 69.
Whatever the alleged tax grab may have been as a result of that
change, if the hon. member would look at the cost to taxpayers, the
benefits made available to people who want to avail themselves of
the RRSP, going back over the years where they missed making
maximum contributions, the hon. member would understand this.
If she takes the time and the care to look carefully, what has been
retained by the government in terms of the change at the upper end
will be more than compensated for by being more generous to
people who were not able to make maximum contributions to the
program through their working life.
* * *
Mr. Stan Dromisky (Thunder Bay-Atikokan, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the solicitor general.
The Humane Society has indicated that in Canada the illegal
profits of wildlife poaching rank third after drug and tobacco and
liquor smuggling. Especially prominent is the smuggling of bear
gall-bladders.
What measures has the government taken to curb this illicit
smuggling of animals and animal parts?
Mr. Nick Discepola (Parliamentary Secretary to Solicitor
General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the Humane Society's
report did confirm the hon. member's question.
I reassure the hon. member the RCMP is working at the national
level with Environment Canada, at the provincial and territorial
levels with natural resource and enforcement agencies, and even at
the international level with INTERPOL to ensure that we not only
develop but implement a comprehensive enforcement program
which takes into account the illegal smuggling of wildlife and
endangered species. I reassure the hon. member that the illegal
trade of bear parts forms a key element of that enforcement
program.
* * *
(1505)
[Translation]
Mr. Stéphane Bergeron (Verchères, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of Foreign Affairs. For more than four
days, the Israeli army has been conducting air raids and artillery
shelling in Lebanon. These actions are in line with the Israeli
policy of retaliation against rocket fire from the Hezbollah militia
stationed in South Lebanon. Unfortunately, these hostilities have
already killed 29 people and wounded more than 120 others.
Can the minister tell us what is the Canadian government's
position on the situation now prevailing in that region?
[English]
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, yesterday I issued a statement urging the parties to the
dispute to use all restraint and to seek out the most effective ways
of dealing with the situation, not through the use of force but
1469
through the use of negotiation which is the very heart and soul of
the whole peace process.
We will have an opportunity to address those questions directly
next Monday when there will be a meeting of the group that came
out of the Sharm el Sheikh meeting on the peace process where the
Israeli and Arab countries will all be there and I will make similar
representation.
* * *
Mr. Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, it is
déjà vu all over again. Seventy-nine years ago the government at
the time promised that income tax would be a temporary measure,
and we are still paying for that broken promise.
In 1993 the Liberals promised that under them the GST would
become a temporary measure. Canadians are waiting for them to
fulfil their promise.
Now the Liberals have turned around and instead of getting rid
of the GST they want to integrate it. They want to make it
something that Canadians are stuck with forever.
My question to the Deputy Prime Minister, who has made all
kinds of pronouncements on this issue, is why are they breaking
their promise? Why are they not getting rid of the GST as they said
they would?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the answer is not very complicated. The hon. member has
only to read page 22 of the red book. We were talking about the
harmonization of taxes, the sales tax in Canada. It will be done.
We are not worried about them because they will not be there for
a long time.
* * *
Mr. Svend J. Robinson (Burnaby-Kingsway, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the minister of fisheries on his B.C.
fleet reduction policy, a policy that has been strongly condemned
by fishers, coastal communities and the B.C. New Democrat
government.
Why did the minister ignore the recommendations of the
Cruickshank commission? Will the minister now agree to
reconsider this policy, in particular the stackable area licensing, the
totally inadequate amount of buyback and the absence of habitat
protection and enhancement? Will the minister recognize that his
policy will have a particularly devastating impact on small owner
operators and on coastal communities in British Columbia?
Hon. Fred Mifflin (Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, I have to tell the hon. member and reassure the House
that the Pacific salmon revitalization plan stems from the Fraser
report which led to the a consideration by 70 stakeholders in this
industry and a report that made 27 recommendations. We took
these recommendations and came up with a plan.
This industry has gone from $400 million to $200 million to $80
million to a possible loss of $10 million this year. The capacity has
quadrupled. We are looking at areas where 40 per cent of fishermen
lost money a couple of years ago. This year it is 60 per cent plus.
This is a sick industry and this is a plan that is meant to revive it. It
is tough medicine but like all tough medicine it is made to improve
the health of the industry.
* * *
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the minister responsible for government services.
The Department of Public Works and Government Services has
been working hard to make direct deposit its standard method of
making various payments to Canadians.
Can the minister tell the House if this initiative has actually
saved money and if so, how much?
Hon. Diane Marleau (Minister of Public Works and
Government Services, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, last year alone we
saved approximately $28 million as a result of direct deposit. These
are savings on postage, paper and on banking charges. In the last
six months alone 1.7 million Canadians have agreed to join the
direct deposit system.
(1510 )
While at this time 40 per cent of all payments by the federal
government are made by direct deposit, it is our intention to
increase that in the short term to at least 60 per cent for an annual
savings of $44 million.
I encourage Canadians as much as possible to join others to help
us save money and at the same time have a very reliable way of
receiving payments.
_____________________________________________
1469
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
[
English]
Mr. Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Madam Speaker, I
am pleased to table, in both official languages, a number of order in
council appointments which were made by the government.
Pursuant to the provisions of Standing Order 110(1), these are
deemed referred to the standing committees, a list of which is
attached.
1470
Mr. Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Madam Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36(8), I have the honour to table, in
both official languages, the government's responses to nine
petitions presented during the first session.
* * *
Mr. Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Madam Speaker, I
have the honour to present the 12th report of the Standing
Committee on Procedure and House Affairs, the membership and
associate memberships of various standing committees. If the
House gives its consent, I intend to move concurrence in the 12th
report at this time.
(Motion agreed to.)
* * *
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.) moved for leave to
introduce Bill C-260, an act to amend the Income Tax Act and the
Canada pension plan (transfer of income to spouse).
He said: Madam Speaker, managing the family home and caring
for preschool children is an honourable profession which has not
been recognized for its value to our society.
The Tax Act and other legislation discriminates against families,
particularly those that choose to provide direct parental care to
preschool children. One aspect of this has to do with the extension
of Canada pension benefits or service credits for those who choose
to provide care in the home to their preschool children.
This bill therefore seeks to promote changes which would have
the intent of extending Canada pension plan benefits or service
credits to those who choose to provide care in the home to their
preschool children.
(1515 )
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
Mr. Bob Ringma (Nanaimo-Cowichan, Ref.) moved for
leave to introduce Bill C-261, an act to require a referendum on the
restoration of the death penalty and to amend the Referendum Act.
He said: Madam Speaker, I am pleased to rise in the House today
to introduce a private member's bill calling for a binding national
referendum on reinstatement of capital punishment.
For too long, in fact forever, Canadians have been shut out of the
debate process where this issue is concerned. Through the use of a
referendum this bill would allow Canadians a say on whether the
Criminal Code should be amended to include the death penalty as a
sentencing option for persons who are convicted of first degree
murder.
Critics will note on reading the bill that it does not ask them to
vote for or against reinstatement of capital punishment. Instead it
asks simply that MPs allow Canadians to make the final
determination in this respect.
I also want to thank my constituents of Nanaimo-Cowichan. It
was they who voted overwhelmingly by a margin of 919 to 104 for
this initiative to be brought before the House which it is today. I
believe this sentiment to be an accurate reflection of the support in
rest of Canada for the bill. As such, and in closing, I ask colleagues
on both sides of the House to support the bill when it comes before
them. More important, I urge members of the subcommittee-
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
Mr. John Bryden (Hamilton-Wentworth, Lib.) moved for
leave to introduce Bill C-262, an act to require charitable and
non-profit organizations that receive public funds to declare the
remuneration of the directors and senior officers.
He said: Madam Speaker, this private member's bill would
provide penalty for those not for profit organizations which fail to
disclose the salary and benefits of their executive officers. This
includes non-profit organizations as well as charities.
This is the type of accountability that the public is now
demanding of those organizations which directly or indirectly
receive taxpayers' funds.
This bill is in the same form that Bill C-224 was at the time of
prorogation of the first session of the 35th Parliament.
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
The Acting Speaker (Mrs. Ringuette-Maltais): The Chair is
satisfied that this bill is in the same form as Bill C-224 was at the
time of prorogation of the first session of the 35th Parliament.
1471
Accordingly, pursuant to order made Monday, March 4, 1996,
the bill is deemed to have been read the second time and referred
to the Standing Committee on Government Operations.
* * *
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Madam Speaker, I
have two petitions pursuant to Standing Order 36. The first is from
Delta, B.C.
The petitioners draw to the attention of the House that managing
the family home and caring for preschool children is an honourable
profession which has not been recognized for its value to our
society. They also state that the Income Tax Act discriminates
against families who make the choice to provide care in the home
for preschool children, the disabled, the chronically ill or the aged.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to pursue
initiatives to eliminate tax discrimination against families who
decide to provide care in the home for preschool children, the
disabled, the chronically ill or the aged.
(1520)
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition is from Sarnia, Ontario.
The petitioners bring to the attention of the House that the
consumption of alcoholic beverages may cause health problems or
impair one's ability and that, specifically, fetal alcohol syndrome
and other alcohol related birth defects are 100 per cent preventable
by avoiding alcohol consumption during pregnancy.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to enact
legislation to require health warning labels to be placed on the
containers of all alcoholic beverages.
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Madam Speaker,
Question No. 11 will be answered today.
[Text]
Question No. 11-Mrs. Wayne:
Did the Minister of International Cooperation speak to the employees of the
Canadian International Development Agency on January 31, 1996, in the Palais
des Congrès in Hull, and if so: (a) what was the total cost to the taxpayer, including:
(i) rental of the facility; (ii) translation; (iii) audio visual expenses; and (iv) other
costs; (b) where these costs charged to the office budget of the Minister, and if not,
to which budget were these costs charged; (c) did a camera crew film the Minister's
address, and if so: (i) for what reason was the Minister filmed; (ii) what was the
name of the firm contracted to film the Minister's address; (iii) how many copies
of the tape were made, and to whom were they given; and (iv) what was the total
cost to the taxpayer, including production, editing and distribution?
Hon. Pierre Pettigrew (Minister for International
Cooperation and Minister responsible for Francophonie, Lib.):
In so far as the Canadian International Development Agency is
concerned, on January 31, 1996 an agency forum was convened by
the president of CIDA with CIDA headquarters staff to introduce
the Minister for International Cooperation with responsibility for
CIDA, the Honourable Pierre S. Pettigrew. As is the common
practice when a new minister is appointed to any federal public
service department, staff members were given the opportunity to
hear the minister's views on pertinent issues and to meet with him
afterwards.
The cost of this agency forum was $1,670, broken down as
follows: room rental, $750; coffee, tea, juice and muffins, $920.
There was no translation provided, as these staff meetings are
conducted in both official languages.
The costs were charged to CIDA's communications branch, as
the event supported internal communications.
The agency forum was videotaped so that CIDA staff members
posted to Canadian missions overseas could view the forum on
videotape. This is the usual practice for departments with
employees posted abroad. The taping was carried out by
Productions André R. Lavoie Inc., and 60 copies were made for
CIDA staff abroad. All work was done in-house, with the exception
of the taping which cost $400. Tape stock was purchased for
$410.73 and the ADCOM Presentation Group provided technical
equipment for $56.71. The total videotape cost was $867.44.
[English]
Mr. Zed: I ask, Mr. Speaker, that the remaining questions be
allowed to stand.
The Acting Speaker (Mrs. Ringuette-Maltais): Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
* * *
The House resumed consideration of the motion that this House
approves in general the budgetary policy of the government, and of
the amendment.
Ms. Marlene Catterall (Ottawa West, Lib.): Madam Speaker,
I am pleased to have the opportunity to address the 1996-97 budget.
Since the beginning of our mandate in 1993 the government has
been faced with many significant challenges. These challenges
have been met directly, openly and honestly with the people of
Canada.
1472
[Translation]
We all know that too many Canadians are unemployed, that
Canadian businesses are still having a hard time, that we must get
down to work right away to maintain social programs that are the
envy of the world. We all know this, and our government intends to
deal with these issues that concern all Canadians.
[English]
Much progress has been made to date in achieving the goals of
job creation and economic growth, and the sustainability of social
programs. The unemployment rate has declined two full percentage
points since the Liberals formed the government. Over 600,000
jobs have been created and inflation is at its lowest level in 30
years. Interest rates have remained low largely because of the
successful action on deficit reduction. Interest rates are critical to
the maintenance of job creation and economic progress.
We have also tackled the maintenance of the health care system
and social programs through progressive reviews in consultation
with Canadians.
The 1996 budget accomplishes much to complement the work
that has been done to date. To progress with the job creation and
economic growth agenda, the government has in the budget
focused on three priorities: youth, trade and technology.
Despite reduced spending in virtually every area of government
activity, spending on youth has been substantially increased. This
budget will provide an extra $315 million over the next three years
toward creation of jobs for young Canadians. An additional $165
million is being provided for students. The federal government will
work closely with provinces and businesses to help young
Canadians find that crucial first job.
[Translation]
Since we came to office, Canada's exports have soared. This
increase in trade has been the driving force behind job creation and
economic growth. Team Canada's trade missions have been highly
successful, generating $20 billion in sales for Canadian businesses.
(1525)
[English]
The 1996 budget will further aid the development of exports by
giving the Export Development Corporation $50 million in new
equity capital for export financing and the Small Business
Development Bank $50 million to assist small and medium sized
businesses, in particular, to participate in international trade.
I said the third priority was science and technology. Leadership
in the knowledge industries means more jobs, lasting jobs and
better jobs for Canadians. High knowledge industries have
contributed more to recent job growth than all other industries
combined.
Over the long term, businesses using new technology will create
new jobs faster than old jobs disappear. This is why technology is a
key element of the job strategy.
Through the 1996 budget special support is being provided to
key sectors such as aeronautics, biotechnology, environmental
technology and the development of the information highway. Just
one example is the student connection program which will hire
2,000 students to show 50,000 small companies how to use the
Internet to help their businesses.
This is an area of investment of scarce dollars that is particularly
important for my community and for the national capital region.
The region has been significantly affected economically by
downsizing in the public service which will amount to a total of
15,000 jobs disappearing over three years starting with the last
budget. As we seek to diversify the local economy, local
governments, the business community and the federal government
working in co-operation, the importance of high technology
development to our region is absolutely crucial.
At the same time the government is making efforts to improve
the situation of the public service. The wage freeze legislation will
expire this year. It will not be renewed. It will not be extended.
Beginning in June annual increments to public service employees
will again be the order of the day. A return to collective bargaining
as the wage freeze legislation expires is something to which we all
look forward.
I want to speak very briefly about a couple of things that are of
particular concern to my constituents because deficit reduction
without tax increases does not come easily and does not come
without pain, nor does ensuring the sustainability of social
programs like our pension system.
The government is acting to ensure that the public pension
system, which has done so much to alleviate the poverty of seniors,
continues. It will be done by increasing benefits to the lowest
income seniors and by ensuring that those now receiving benefits
or within five years of receiving old age security or other
retirement benefits will continue to have the right to those benefits.
As the minister looks toward the development of this legislation
I want to raise with him some concerns that have come to my
attention. First is the very short time frame for implementing the
rollover of RRSPs into RRIFs or retirement income. This is causing
great concern to people who have made investment plans under the
rules that existed. They are saying we need a better phase-in period.
I also want to draw to the minister's attention my concern that
the legislation implementing the changes to pensions as well as to
RRSPs should pay attention to the need to improve the economic
status of retired women. Ninety per cent of the poorest elderly in
this country are women. I do not think any of us need an
1473
explanation as to why that happens; work history and a variety of
other situations.
(1530 )
We have an opportunity as we implement changes to the pension
plan to also equalize the retirement income of women. I urge the
minister to do that. I would be happy to share with him some ideas
on how that might be done.
In conclusion, this has not been an easy budget. It has involved
some difficult choices as has every one of our budgets since 1993.
It is a reasonable balance between the kind of compassionate,
caring society we want and the fiscal restraint that currently is
necessary to get us to a much better future for the entire country. I
am pleased to speak today in support of it.
Mr. Leon E. Benoit (Vegreville, Ref.): Madam Speaker, the
member indicated that her government is concerned about
maintaining social programs into the future. She is concerned
particularly about maintaining pensions.
If that is the case, why does her government continue to increase
the amount of money spent on interest payments on the debt from
$38 billion to about $50 billion since it has come into power? Why
did her government leave in place a pension plan that is totally out
of line with what is acceptable to Canadians? If the government
was serious about maintaining social programs and pensions, it
would not have left in place the pension plan that it has.
How can Canadians believe that her government is really, truly
concerned about the future of social programs when its actions say
otherwise?
Ms. Catterall: Madam Speaker, I think it behoves the hon.
member for Vegreville to acknowledge those areas in which the
government has made substantial progress.
Specifically the member talked about the debt and the deficit. I
sat in this Chamber through five budgets of the previous
government and saw threats, promises, cutbacks and sacrifices so
that we could get the deficit under control. The deficit just kept
going up.
Our government in just two budgets has been able to
substantially reduce the amount of the deficit. The hon. member
knows very well that in the next two budgets we will have dropped
not from 6 per cent of GDP in deficit to 3 per cent as we committed
at the last election, but to 2 per cent, in other words not by 50 per
cent but in fact by 66 per cent. That will bring the deficit from over
$45 billion when we took office to $17 billion by the time our term
is over.
Regarding pensions, this is the first government since the MPs
pension plan was introduced in the 1950s that has actually reduced
it to the tune of $3.3 million worth of savings to Canadians. It has
reduced the benefits by over 20 per cent. We have met every single
one of our commitments on that matter and have gone beyond
them.
Yes, it is still a very generous pension plan. It is one for which, as
the member knows, MPs pay very generously as well, far more
than most other pension plans. It needs further reform but one
cannot disrupt the lives of people who have served in this House for
decades by suddenly saying they do not have the pension plan they
thought they had.
In terms of the sustainability of pensions generally, 75 per cent
of seniors in this country live on incomes of under $26,000. Ninety
per cent of the poorest seniors are women who are either single,
widowed, divorced or separated.
I regret as much as anybody in this House an end of a universal
pension plan which is an entitlement of citizenship. I also realize
the necessity of looking after those lowest income seniors when
resources are limited. I am pleased that we are going to be
increasing benefits to those lowest income Canadians in
retirement.
(1535)
Mr. Benoit: Madam Speaker, in the last election campaign when
Reform proposed targeting old age security to those most in need,
the Liberals promised that they would never end universality of old
age security. Now the finance minister has done that.
We could not believe them on the GST. We cannot trust them on
old age security. The numbers the hon. member used in terms of
deficit reduction are yet to happen sometime in the future.
The Liberal government has made a little progress on the deficit.
Canada's debt is the second highest in the industrialized world and
it is still being added to every year.
It is so difficult to understand how members of that party can say
with a straight face that they are doing what has to be done to
assure that the money will be there for social programs into the
future because they have not.
Ms. Catterall: Madam Speaker, as I encouraged the member to
do on his first question and comment, I suggest that he might want
to accurately reflect what our government has done. He knows
perfectly well that deficit reduction is not something for the future.
He knows very well this is the first government in over a decade
that has successfully reduced the deficit from $45 billion to $30
billion. That is a one-third reduction in only two budgets and that is
a substantial reduction.
On pensions, let me just say we are not like the Reform Party. It
wants everybody to have to rely on themselves for their pensions.
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.):
Madam Speaker, it is a pleasure for me to rise in the House today to
address the 1996-97 budget as presented by the Minister of Finance
on March 6.
1474
When our government was elected in October 1993, Canadians
from coast to coast to coast told us that reducing the deficit and
the debt must be our number one priority. This budget along with
our two previous budgets showed Canadians that we have been
and continue to be listening.
When this government was elected the annual deficit was more
than $42 billion. By the end of the 1995-96 fiscal year we reached
the deficit reduction target of approximately $32 billion. We are on
target to reach our original goal set for the 1996-97 fiscal year of a
deficit of 3 per cent of GDP which will be approximately $24
billion.
The Minister of Finance has already set two rolling targets to
take us into the second half of our mandate. These targets will
reduce the deficit to 2 per cent of GDP by fiscal year 1997-98. By
the turn of the century, by the year 2000, I personally hope to see
that the deficit is realized to zero and the introduction of a balanced
budget to this House.
The 1996 budget continues on the track of reinventing
government. Last year through a major program review we
managed to protect vital programs while reducing spending to its
lowest level of GDP in almost 50 years. This year we have further
reduced program spending in order to move closer to a balanced
budget. Federal program spending this year will represent 12 per
cent of GDP, its lowest level since 1949 and down from 20 per cent
only a decade ago.
Liberal governments over the years have played a leading role in
building Canada's social programs. Today faced with dramatic
changes to our society and our economy, the Liberal government
must ensure that these programs remain effective and financially
sustainable.
(1540 )
One way the government is doing this is through the new Canada
health and social transfer which consolidates transfers for health
care, post-secondary education and social services. The transfer is
a block fund which offers more flexibility to the provinces. This
flexibility will allow for the development of innovative programs
for Canadians receiving social assistance. Greater flexibility will
also reduce administrative costs and will allow provinces to adjust
to the new funding levels while still protecting programs that
Canadians desire.
This budget introduces a five year funding arrangement for the
CHST for the years 1998-99 through to 2002-03. The CHST will be
stabilized at the 1998-99 levels for another two years and then will
begin to grow. There will not be any cuts to the CHST beyond those
announced in last year's budget. When the CHST begins to grow
beyond the year 2000, federal transfers will increase for the first
time since the mid-1980s.
The CHST will allow provinces to plan programs to meet their
needs with clearly set levels of federal funding. By providing
predictable funding, the government is demonstrating its
commitment to safeguarding health care and other social programs
that are valued by all Canadians.
As we all know, part of the CHST is made up of a cash transfer
which was scheduled to gradually decline. However, in response to
concerns about diminishing cash transfers, this government has
announced that the cash component will be kept above a floor of
$11 billion per year for the five years between 1998 and 2003.
While the CHST will give more power to the provinces, the cash
transfer will guarantee a strong federal presence for programs of
national priority such as post-secondary education and social
assistance.
In addition, the government will continue to vigorously defend
the five principles of the Canadian health care system:
comprehensiveness, universality, accessibility, portability, and
public administration. The federal government will also work with
the provinces to develop other shared principles and objectives for
this new transfer.
This budget is good for Canadians. For the third year in a row
there will be no increase in personal income tax rates nor will there
be any increase in excise taxes.
Additionally, the budget marks a significant turning point. In our
first two budgets we were forced to make a lot of tough but
necessary decisions in order to clean up the economic mess left by
the previous government. Unlike those budgets, this budget has a
more direct focus on the future, a more sustainable plan, a long
term plan for Canadians. This focus is reflected in our attention to
our youth, our attention to working families and in particular to
seniors.
February's throne speech put the problems facing Canadian
youth into the spotlight. Youth unemployment and
underemployment are a serious concern in my riding of
Cumberland-Colchester. Young people throughout the area feel
that they have to leave home, in fact many of them must leave the
country to find employment.
This budget announces concrete measures which demonstrate
that the Liberal government is serious about improving
opportunities for young Canadians. To make education more
affordable, tax credits for university and college students and their
parents will increase. This budget will also stabilize the funding
that we transfer to the provinces for post-secondary education. In
addition, it lays out a plan to increase that funding over time.
This budget will double federal funding for summer jobs. In
1996-97 we doubled the number. There are 200 more jobs in my
riding. The deadline was April 12 and we encouraged employers in
all sectors of our society to get out there and employ our youth this
summer allowing an extra 30,000 young Canadians to gain vital
experience and help finance their education. It also challenges the
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private sector and other levels of government to do their share to
create opportunities and to assist our youth in finding their first job.
(1545)
My riding of Cumberland-Colchester consists of hard working
families who work long hours with fewer benefits to try and stretch
that paycheque as far as they can. These families will benefit from
this year's budget.
Parents who wish to return to school in order to find better jobs
will now be able to make full use of the child tax credit. This
includes parents who show the courage to return to high school. We
are raising the age limit for the child care deduction from 14 to 16
years so that more parents who work nights can claim it. As well,
we are doubling the working income supplement of the child tax
benefit. This will mean an extra $500 a year for low income
working parents.
This budget is also committed to security for the elderly through
the availability of old age security and the guaranteed income
supplement. The budget includes a new seniors benefit to be
implemented in the year 2001. This tax free benefit will replace the
existing OAS and GIS programs. More than 70 per cent of our
seniors will actually receive higher benefits under this new system,
many of whom are single women.
Pensions for today's seniors, near seniors and their spouses will
be protected. Seniors will be guaranteed to receive an amount that
is no less than the current pension plan. The new system will better
respond to the needs of low income seniors and will ensure a
responsive, affordable system for our children and grandchildren.
Let there be no doubt that we will look after our elderly and that
this budget is the first step in doing so.
There are a record number of single parent households in this
country. When a marriage breaks down, the children are always the
first to suffer. I have received many letters from men and women
alike who are concerned about the current child support system.
This budget speaks to those concerns and introduces measures to
improve the system, measures that include a revised tax treatment
of child support payments.
Currently child support payments are taxable for the recipient
and tax deductible for the parent paying support. This is wrong.
Payments are supposed to provide support for children. They are
not income for parents. The budget proposes that all child support
awards agreed to on or before May 1, 1997 will not be included as
income of the custodial parent for tax purposes, nor will they be tax
deductible for the parent paying the support. The government will
also introduce new guidelines and enhance enforcement for the
collection of child support payments.
The Acting Speaker (Mrs. Ringuette-Maltais): I regret but the
member's time has expired. Questions or comments. Resuming
debate.
Mrs. Daphne Jennings (Mission-Coquitlam, Ref.): Madam
Speaker, this is the third federal budget I have spoken on since I
came to Ottawa. In each budget I have expressed major
disappointment: in the first, because it did not deal with the fiscal
realities that faced Canada in 1994, the deficit and the debt; in the
1995 budget, because it missed a tremendous opportunity to put
Canada on a positive fiscal course which would see the deficit
eliminated and the debt paid down within the next five years.
Like Liberals of old, the Liberals who started deficit financing
rather than making tough decisions, these present day Liberals
again put off tough decisions. This refusal to come to grips with
Canada's debt problem plus interest on the deficit means that the
debt has continued to soar. By the end of March it was over $578
billion. The Liberals by failing to address this issue have added
over $200 billion to the national debt.
(1550 )
As the debt grows, so does the interest that must be paid. The
government now pays $47 billion in interest on the debt. This is
more than it pays on elderly benefits, unemployment insurance,
payments to aboriginal peoples, foreign aid, the CBC, and science
and technology combined.
Let us face it. This is not just a waste of the taxpayers' money. It
affects how business and industry reacts to our country. This kind
of mismanagement of the country's economy does not create a
climate for investment, it does not create confidence.
If the government had proceeded immediately in the 1994
budget to address Canada's problems with the economy, the
confidence for investment and job creation would now be with us.
The job creation proposals in the budget which we all know will not
create a single long term job would not have been necessary and
would not be with us now eating up taxpayers' dollars.
If the right economic road had been followed in the beginning by
these Liberals, they would now be in a position to reduce taxes. A
reduction in income taxes, a reduction in payroll taxes,
unemployment insurance premiums and the elimination of the
heavy regulatory burden which follows Canadian companies would
go a long way to stimulate investment in Canada. These are the
measures that should have been announced in this budget.
A failure to deal with the deficit and Canada's accumulated debt
is not the only shortcoming of this budget. This budget also has
severe human consequences. The finance minister and the Minister
of Justice through their combined wisdom have seen fit to get
involved through the budget in the payments made by the
non-custodial parent to the custodial parent after divorce. Starting
in May 1997 these payments will no longer be tax deductible by
the
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paying ex-spouse and will not have to be included in the income of
the receiving spouse.
Why the government will not leave the issue of taxation of child
support payments to be dealt with by the parties themselves with
the help of a mediator is beyond me. However what worries me
even more is the fact that this new rule can be made retroactive. It
can be made to apply to payments that are now being made. This
means that thousands of Canadians, who prior to budget day
thought the matter of child support was well settled, are now
reviewing their child support agreements to see how this budget
will affect them.
Now that the paying ex-spouse may no longer claim a tax
deduction for the support payments, he or she will have less money
to look after their new family as well as to help the ex-spouse and
the children of the first marriage. Who is going to benefit from this
massive tax grab? Not the parents involved in the divorce, not the
custodial or the non-custodial parent and certainly not the children.
Who will benefit? The government. No new taxes in this budget.
That is a very dishonest statement. The government already knows
it will make over $250 million on this new program in a major tax
grab.
What if some of these ex-spouses are already having a difficult
time making support payments and keeping up with the demands of
a new family? Without the help of a tax deduction might they be
less inclined to make full support payments? Is the government
building a new monster, another social problem on the backs of
divorced parents?
As well, thousands of family law lawyers across the country are
down on their knees thanking the justice minister for increasing
their billable income for at least the coming two years. This piece
of legislation has opened the floodgates to more litigation. How
dare the Minister of Justice and indeed the Liberal members of the
House of Commons justice committee decide to vote down my
private members' bill on grandparents rights because it might
increase litigation and then support this budget measure which
virtually by definition will increase litigation. Perhaps my bill in
reality did not increase litigation enough for them to support it.
What about seniors issues? Seniors issues are put off to be dealt
with in the next century. If the old age security and the guaranteed
income supplement need to be changed or need to be replaced, why
put it off for four years? Again, if a tough decision which might
affect the government's popularity could be made, the Liberal
solution is to put it off at least until after the next election.
More than that, I believe the Liberals in this budget have broken
faith with our seniors. During the Quebec referendum period and in
the run-up to the budget, the Prime Minister repeatedly assured
Canadian seniors their retirement incomes were safe. In a
supplementary document entitled: ``The Seniors Benefit: Securing
the Future'' the government stated: ``Current seniors have the right
to continue in their retirement secure the change will not affect
them. That is guaranteed''. This is what the government said but
this is not what it has done.
(1555)
Let us look carefully at the actions of this government. The
government reduced the mandatory withdrawal age for RRSP
contributors from 71 to 69. Seniors will pay more in taxes over
their retirement. Because of this budget, seniors will have to
remove their retirement savings from the their RRSP accounts
attracting tax a full two years earlier than would otherwise be the
case.
Could it be that when reality hits our seniors and they realize
they will not be better off, that in fact they will be forced to roll
over their RRSPs at 69 years of age instead of 71, they will realize
that this Liberal government has increased their tax burden and
taken away direct savings from their many long years of hard work
as dependable Canadian taxpayers?
Is it that by placing the proposed new seniors benefit to come
into force in the year 2001 the government hopes to coast in on the
next election and by the time that our seniors realize they have been
hit with a new and higher tax on their retirement income it will be
too late?
This government seems to be maintaining its do nothing attitude
and closing its eyes to an increasing debt of close to $600 billion.
No change that negatively affects seniors, I do not think so.
What else did this budget do? The government froze the RRSP
contribution limit at $13,500 until 2003, lifting it marginally
thereafter. Again this affects the ability of Canadians to provide for
their own retirement. Again the government's promise to seniors
has been broken.
As I said earlier, seniors are living longer healthier lives, retiring
later by some. They want the right to service their own retirement.
They want the government to live up to its promises.
Then there are the Liberal make work programs. The Liberals
will spend over $65 million in the next five years to establish a
commission to study health care needs. Canada's health care needs
no more studies. This is simply a way to put Liberal friends on the
commission. Then there are the other make work projects for
youth. None of them create meaningful long term jobs. I know it,
my party knows it and worst of all, the Liberals know it but again, it
looks good and it sounds good to the electorate.
The only long term permanent jobs are created by industry in a
healthy marketplace. Industry will only create these jobs when it is
1477
confident the government is moving in the right direction. Tax
relief might have been a good answer in part of this budget.
With this budget the Liberal government has missed a great
opportunity to do something for the future of Canada. It did not.
Perhaps it is time it stepped aside and let the people of Canada
decide on the future of this country.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Madam Speaker, it is as
clear today as it ever has been that Canadians do not want rhetoric
from their government. What they want is action. What they seek is
real progress.
These are the standards that Canadians have set. These are the
standards by which this government wants to be judged. Seldom in
our history have so many experienced such anxiety. Canadians feel
our very way of life is at risk. They look at medicare and feel it is
threatened. They look at the pension system and wonder if it will be
there in the years to come. They consider the economy and worry
that the gale force winds of competition and change will carry away
their jobs. And Canadians think about their children, our youth, and
ask what kind of opportunities will be left for them.
These are damning statements from a member of the opposition
but that is a direct quote, the opening paragraphs of the speech by
the Minister of Finance to this House, the budget speech on March
6, 1996. That is the admission of the Minister of Finance to the
House and the country: the government does not have the answers
that are required, does not have a plan and, halfway through its
mandate, has done virtually nothing to address the major concerns
of Canadians.
(1600)
Let us look at these questions. Canadians feel their very way of
life is at risk. That is a statement by the Minister of Finance. Of
course it is at risk. Why? Taxation is going up and up, contrary to
what the Minister of Finance says. While he says that he has not
raised taxes, everyone knows that he has raised taxation revenue
from Canadians by taking a dollar from the seniors, by reducing the
amount that they can put into RRSPs. They are going to be cut off
at age 69 instead of age 71.
The minister knows full well that the basic exemptions for
income tax are not indexed for inflation at all as long as inflation is
under 3 per cent. He has taken unemployment insurance premiums
out of Canadian taxpayers faster than would otherwise would be
required.
What a litany of exercises by the Minister of Finance. By
squeezing more dollars out of this program and collecting a little
more from that program, ensuring that Canadians have to pay more
somewhere else, all the while he is claiming that he has not raised
taxes. I will give him his due. While he has not raised the general
rate of taxation, he has done everything in his power to raise taxes
by every other means at his disposal.
That is why Canadians feel that their very way of life is at risk.
The Minister of Finance says that Canadians look at medicare and
feel it is threatened. They have every right to feel it is threatened.
The government remains absolutely committed to keeping its head
in the sand. It stands by its five principles that unfortunately are
outdated.
Medicare has stood us well until now, but unfortunately we have
a plan that we can no longer afford. Changes are required. What
does the government do? It does absolutely nothing. It has not
changed one thing, other than transfer less money to the provinces.
It is allowing them to figure out how to deliver health care within a
framework that was devised 30 years ago. Unfortunately the
provinces are finding that they cannot live within the new
restrictions. That is why medicare is threatened.
It is up to the government to do something to demonstrate
leadership. If I recall, the Prime Minister campaigned in the last
election that he would convene a conference of the health ministers
to resolve the crisis in health care. That was going to take place by
June 1994. It will soon be June 1996 and we are still waiting for
that to happen. That is why health care is threatened.
Seniors look at the pension system and wonder if it will be there
in the years to come. The actuaries have said that there is a $600
billion shortfall in the Canada pension plan.
Today the government has started a travelling road show to ask
Canadians what they want. Where is the leadership from this
government? Where is the commitment by the government to the
seniors who have worked hard all their lives? Now that they are
retired and dependant on their savings and the money that they paid
to the Canada pension plan in the belief that old age security was
going to be there for them, these are the things that are threatened.
Seniors are concerned. They are asking if the pension system
will be there for years to come. We have said and seniors are saying
it more and more that it is not going to be there. The newspapers
today are suggesting that the premiums are going to double in order
to maintain the program that is currently available.
I am not sure the Canadian economy can afford a doubling of
premiums. That is why Canadians are concerned. Is the Canada
pension plan going to be there for the seniors of today, far less the
seniors of tomorrow? It is an answer to that question which we
want from the government.
In the budget speech the minister said that old age security and
the guaranteed income supplement are going, that they will be
finished in the year 2001. No more old age security. No more
1478
guaranteed income supplement. The programs that seniors have
depended on for the last generation or more are going to be wiped
away.
(1605)
Where does that leave them? We know the minister is going to
introduce something called a tax free benefit to seniors. However,
is that going to be better or worse for seniors? They do not know,
which is why they have every right to be concerned.
Not only is the government saying it has a serious problem with
the Canada pension plan but it does not know how to fix it. In the
same speech the Minister of Finance states he is taking away the
old age security and the guaranteed income supplement and is
replacing it with something called a tax free seniors benefit which,
as far as we can tell, could in many cases pay seniors less than what
they are receiving today.
Do seniors not have the right to be concerned? I think they have a
right to be concerned. I would think the government would say that
they have a right to be concerned. Yet halfway through its mandate,
the Minister of Finance is making statements at the beginning of
his speech which are almost an admission of failure to manage the
programs that it was elected to manage.
The government considers the economy and worries that the gale
force winds of competition and change will carry away the jobs.
Does anyone remember what was the promise of the election
campaign of this government? It was jobs, jobs, jobs. Now it is
saying that people are concerned that the changes in the
competition will carry away their jobs. What is the government
doing about it? Not very much. Nothing at all.
The government spent $6 billion on an infrastructure program
and the President of the Treasury Board said it created 8,000
permanent jobs. This is 8,000 jobs for a $6 billion investment. Was
that value for money? I do not think it was. As I have said many
times, the government would have been better to have put the
money in the bank and given the people the interest.
There are many more things I would like to speak about, such as
the privatization of NavCan and CN Rail. We are now hearing that
the food inspection branch is going to be set up in some kind of
unaccountable, removed from government, removed from
criticism by the members of Parliament. We hope it is going to do a
good job.
The government says it is committed to cutting down on waste.
There are many issues that I would love to talk about and continue
on. I have only got to the first half of the first page of the minister's
speech. I could go for days. Unfortunately I cannot.
Ms. Marlene Catterall (Ottawa West, Lib.): Madam Speaker,
I have to make the same comment I made to the person questioning
me after speaking on the budget. I think one of the best things we
can all do as parliamentarians for our constituents and for
Canadians generally is to give them the facts.
Therefore, when the member who has just spoken talks about
taking away the old age security and the GST and talks about those
programs as being gone, finished, wiped away, he knows that is not
the truth. He knows perfectly well that any senior now receiving a
benefit will continue to receive exactly that benefit. He knows that
any person within five years of being entitled to those benefits will
be entitled to continue receiving them for the entire period of their
retirement. He knows that is a commitment of the government and
of the Prime Minister personally. It is precisely what is laid out in
the budget, unless those seniors now aged 60 and looking forward
to retirement at 65 determine that the new combined benefit is in
fact to their advantage.
The member also knows that combining those benefits and
directing them is going to make sure that 90 per cent of the elderly
poor who are at the lowest level of income, 90 per cent being sole
support women, will in fact get more not less. He knows that the
benefits for today's seniors are not in danger.
(1610)
That is quite a bit different from the Reform Party plan which
requires everybody to put something aside for their own retirement
under some kind of private RRSP system.
I remember the days when my father made $90 a month. This
plan would require many families to choose between putting food
on the table for their children or providing for their retirement 40
years hence. As a mother, frankly I know what choice I would
make. That is not security in retirement.
As well, he knows that the Prime Minister has kept his promise
concerning health care by establishing the national health forum
which the Prime Minister personally chairs. Perhaps the hon.
member would consider doing what I and many Liberal members
have done in our ridings and hold a forum in which his constituents
can give him their views, as mine have done, on what their
priorities are for a sustainable health care system for the future.
The member asked about the infrastructure program. Was that
value for money? Ask the 100,000 plus people who had a job for
that time if they thought it was value for money.
Mr. Williams: Madam Speaker, the member asked for the facts.
Let me give the facts.
``There is widespread anxiety, particularly among the young,
that the public pension system will not be there for them when they
retire''. That is a direct quote from the Minister of Finance. ``First
1479
the CPP must be put on a sound financial footing and done so in a
way that is sustainable, affordable and fair''. Another direct quote
from the Minister of Finance.
Carrying on: ``Clearly, the government should have acted some
time ago to address this problem''. A direct quote from the
Minister of Finance. I can go on and on.
The point I am trying to make is that seniors and everybody else
listened to the Liberals when they said jobs, jobs, jobs, when they
said that is going to be there for them. The Liberals told Canadians
not to worry about their pensions because they would make sure
they will be there. What did we find out? There were no answers
coming from the government. The facts speak for themselves.
These were direct quotes from the budget speech by the Minister of
Finance to this House on March 6, 1996.
Hon. Charles Caccia (Davenport, Lib.): Madam Speaker, in
the few minutes available I would like to put forward some
thoughts on future budgets.
First, let me congratulate the minister on his announcement on
March 6 of the change to the Income Tax Act regarding
investments in energy efficiency and renewable energy sources.
This is an initial step in the right direction which will help in
keeping our red book promise to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
The main point I would like to make today is to express the hope
that sooner or later, but preferably sooner, the government will find
it possible to conclude the policy of deficit reduction and review
and expand public sector expenditures in an effort to improve the
social and economic conditions of most Canadians, particularly
low and middle income earners.
We have witnessed with apprehension the phenomenon of
certain large corporations, banks and other financial institutions
making record profits by continuing to ``downsize'' their
workforce. The time has come, as one observer recently put it, to
downsize downsizing for the sake of social peace and stability.
The Easter recess has allowed me time to note the profound
malaise caused by unemployment and poverty and to bring back to
Ottawa from Toronto and Montreal recent images and impressions
of the hardships Canadians are presently enduring.
In increasing numbers people are sleeping on sidewalks and in
telephone booths and are reduced to begging for change in our
downtown urban areas. Families are struggling to make ends meet.
There are even reports that the financial hardship resulting from
cuts to welfare payments in Ontario has become a factor in parents
offering their children for adoption. Cash strapped municipalities
are finding it almost impossible to provide basic services, from
road maintenance to public libraries to providing an adequate
number of teachers, to mention a few.
(1615)
Social housing applicants are waiting longer and longer, in some
cases several years, before their turn comes.
High youth unemployment set at 15.3 per cent in March has
eroded the confidence and hope of our young people to find
meaningful work commensurate with their training and career
plans. It is no wonder that youth are without jobs when thousands
of people have been and continue to be thrown out of work as a
result of corporate and government layoffs, including the 10,500
provincial civil servants recently cut by the Harris government in
Ontario.
Consumers are hesitant to buy even small appliances because of
the uncertainty posed by potential job loss. Companies such as
General Motors are closing down auto parts plants in Oshawa and
Windsor because of low cost competition in the U.S., all in an
effort to please the insatiable corporate appetite for larger and
larger profits. Also, Kenworth Trucks in St. Therese, Quebec is
giving notice that it intends to shift and enlarge truck production to
its plant in Mexico.
New housing starts remain at a record low while the savings
rates of Canadians stay at record low levels and the percentage of
after tax personal income going toward servicing their debt is at a
record high.
The poverty gap, that is the amount of additional income that
would be required to bring all Canadians above the poverty line,
amounts to a staggering $15.2 billion with single parent mothers
representing one of the largest groups living in poverty.
It seems to me that these points call for a number of measures,
the most pressing being the urgent necessity of redistributing
incomes. Personal and corporate tax expenditures alone still cost
the federal government billions of dollars in lost revenue. Some of
these expenditures are necessary and warranted but others such as
the non-taxation of gambling and lottery winnings, alone
amounting to some $900 million in lost revenue in one year are not.
To give another example, the tax concessions in the resource
sector such as the Canadian exploration expense and the Canadian
development expense are conservatively estimated at $150 million
a year. These expenditures are no longer justifiable if development
is to become sustainable.
Over the past 30 years corporate taxes as a percentage of federal
government revenue and as a percentage of GDP have declined.
There was a corporate tax rate reduction from 46 per cent to 38 per
cent under the Mulroney regime, thus reducing the corporate fiscal
burden in Canada to one of the lowest among OECD countries.
1480
While the social safety net has undergone intense scrutiny and
reductions, for example unemployment insurance and the Canada
assistance plan, outside of small increases in the large corporation
tax and corporate surtax in 1995-96, increases in corporate
taxation remain untouched in this budget. This policy has
produced a serious imbalance between the treatment of social and
economic policies.
For these reasons, sooner rather than later the Minister of
Finance needs to shift his focus of attention from deficit reduction
toward a policy which will: one, restore fairness and
progressiveness in the tax system so as to bring back the
confidence of Canadians in their government's sense of social
justice and equity; two, give poverty issues the attention they so
urgently require; three, provide low income Canadians with
adequate social measures to ensure they can live in dignity; and
four, translate the government's commitment to sustainable
development into coherent policies that will ensure future growth
while taking into account the need to protect our freshwater
resources, the necessity of clean air to breathe, the fragility of
many ecosystems, the need to adequately conserve our agricultural
soil and the need for sustainable fisheries and forests, to name a
few.
In addition, our sustainable development policies must respect
our international commitments from the management of toxic
waste to the ratification of the law of the sea, from the biodiversity
convention to our commitments to lower carbon dioxide reductions
under the climate change convention. All of these are important
Liberal commitments we must work to realize.
(1620)
In conclusion, I have a few words on the phasing out of the old
age security pension over the next five years and the Canada
pension plan. The replacement of the old age security pension with
the proposals for new seniors benefits involves basing benefits on
household income instead of on individual income as is the present
case. Unfortunately the losers in the scenario are married women
who have no income of their own who at the same time have no
legal entitlement to the income of their spouse. I urge the
government to redress this inequity over the next five years to
ensure that married women retain the same degree of financial
independence they have presently under the old age security
pension.
On the Canada pension plan, I congratulate the government for
launching today public hearings in Toronto which will help decide
on the future of the CPP. Our increasing senior population makes it
necessary to do in Canada what has already been done in other
OECD countries namely, to increase contribution rates so as to
retain both the present retirement age and level of benefits. This is
a small price to pay for a retirement plan which benefits most
Canadians who cannot afford a private retirement plan and which
permits mobility from province to province and from job to job.
The Canada pension plan is one of the best plans of its kind in the
world. It is funded entirely by contributions from employers and
employees without a penny coming from taxes. It serves Canadians
well and has done so for some 30 years. It ought to remain as a
public fund owned and operated by the public sector for the benefit
of many generations of Canadians to come.
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Madam Speaker, we have
seen governments over the years bring forward budgets that have
expressed their concern about overspending and deficit spending,
yet each year the debt has grown and grown and grown. Since 1993
we have heard exactly the same kind of rhetoric, that everything is
fine, we are on track, be happy and do not worry. Yet the debt has
continued to grow year after year after year. The finance minister
will not tell us when he believes we will stop sliding into debt. In
other words, he has not set a date like many of the provinces have
for a balanced budget.
Seeing as how the interest payment on our debt is the greatest
threat toward our social programs, including our senior citizens
programs, that enormous amount of money we have to pay on an
ever rising debt which is going to amount to approximately $50
billion by 1997, which is just next year, is the government prepared
to tell Canadians when it expects to balance the debt? Would the
member be prepared to offer an estimation of what the debt will be
when the government finally reaches a point when it is no longer
overspending and borrowing, but instead living within its means?
What does the hon. member think that debt and the associated
financial interest payments will be?
Mr. Caccia: Madam Speaker, the hon. member is engaging in a
typical Reform misconceptual game of linking debt with social
security payments and I think he is wrong. He is completely wrong
because the social security system cannot be seen in isolation as a
factor that runs counter to economic interest.
Whatever penny or dollar is spent in terms of pensions is
returned to the economy very quickly through expenditures by
seniors who certainly know how to use their revenue. Usually that
revenue goes to the cornerstore, to the supermarket, to transport
and other commodities.
(1625)
Therefore there is no conflict between the well-being of the
economy and the well-being of social security. On the contrary, by
ensuring that our seniors receive an adequate pension payment,
adequate security and the ability to live in dignity as they do now,
we also pump the money back into the economy and everybody
benefits from it.
I noticed on the part of the hon. member the same tendency as
that of the hon. member for Prince Albert, a desire to spread some
fear among Canadians about the future of their Canada pension
plan. The Canada pension plan as it stands today is not in any
1481
danger at all. It is a pay as you go scheme. It is a scheme that takes
care of the immediate present and will be put in a condition to take
care of future generations as the number of seniors increase by
adequate adjustment in the contributory benefits.
In doing so we can look forward not just to a few years but
decades and decades of Canadians having a pension plan that will
at least meet the basic requirements of an individual. It is a system
and a scheme that for the last 30 years, as a result of a fine Liberal
measure, has served us well. I must make sure the hon. members of
the Reform Party understand that the Canada pension plan does not
receive one penny from the taxpayers. It is a self-sustaining plan.
Mrs. Sue Barnes (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
National Revenue, Lib.): Madam Speaker, I am pleased today to
rise to discuss the Minister of Finance's March 6 budget.
This budget proves that the government is keeping its promise to
put Canada's fiscal house in order. The 1996 budget consolidates
and extends the actions taken in the 1994 and 1995 budgets. It
continues our work to create the proper climate for economic
growth and job development. It meets and even betters our fiscal
targets.
It ensures the sustainability of Canadian social programs so that
those who need assistance receive assistance. The budget relies on
government expenditure cuts to meet our goals. There are $1.9
billion in cuts in 1998-99.
Program spending stood at 16.8 per cent of GDP when this
government took office in 1993. It will be reduced to 12 per cent in
1998, the lowest level since 1950. Taken together this
government's first three budgets have introduced seven dollars in
cuts for every dollar of tax increases. Our borrowing requirements
will drop from $30 billion in 1993-94 to $6 billion in 1997-98. As
well the ratio of debt to GDP will drop by more than one percentage
point in 1997-98. In other words, the economy will finally be
growing faster than the debt in 1997-98. The hon. member asked
that question just moments ago and I have just provided the answer.
The cuts we have made are strategic. We are remaking
government to meet the needs of Canadians in a globalized high
tech world. Government may be smaller but it is more efficient.
Services are provided more quickly where and when Canadians
need them.
I would like to review the budget measures relating to Revenue
Canada. We are strengthening our ability to combat the
underground economy. The underground economy is not a
victimless crime. It hurts honest taxpayers who are forced to pay
more than their fair share of taxes. It places honest businesses at a
competitive disadvantage. Revenue Canada is undertaking new
enforcement measures to address this. Some $3.8 billion of
additional taxes have been assessed. More resources are going to
our audit program aimed at unincorporated businesses and
self-employed individuals and we expect this to bring us further net
revenues of about $100 million.
Over two years ago the government consolidated revenue
administration at the federal level. Sales, income and excise tax
collection were integrated with customs and trade administration
into a single department. The integration has performed as
expected. By eliminating administrative overlap, considerable
savings have been generated for the government. More important,
the change has meant better service for Canadians. Administrative
costs have been cut and the burden of compliance for taxpayers has
been reduced.
(1630)
There has been excellent progress, but the job is not finished.
The budget confirms that the government will create a new
institution, the Canada revenue commission. The new commission
will enhance internal efficiency by providing increased
administrative and financial flexibility.
The real gains for taxpayers, however, lie in the possibility of
greater co-operation between the federal and provincial
governments and the streamlining of revenue administration.
We must also ensure that our social programs are affordable and
sustainable into the future. The budget contains measures to
provide secure, stable and growing funding for health,
post-secondary education and social assistance.
The Canada health and social transfer, CHST, introduced last
year provides the provinces with enhanced flexibility to design and
administer their own programs while safeguarding medicare and
other social support.
Since the cash component represents a sizeable part of total
federal spending, we could not put our finances on a sustainable
basis without reducing the transfers. That is why funding
arrangements for 1996-97 and 1997-98 decline.
Following consultations with the provinces, the 1996 budget
now acts to extend the CHST but there are no further cuts. We have
set out a five year schedule in which transfers grow and the cash
component is stabilized and increases over time.
The budget provides additional protection to the provinces. A
new cash floor will guarantee cash transfers of at least $11 billion
in all years. We also want to ensure that Canada's retirement
income system will be there for Canadians when they need it.
Over the next 30 years the number of seniors will more than
double while the proportion of Canadians working to support the
pension system will decline. Recognizing the wide public concern
1482
over this situation, the Prime Minister has promised to protect the
pensions of today's seniors.
Beginning in 2001, a new seniors' benefit will replace the old
age and guaranteed income benefits. The new benefit will be tax
free and fully indexed to inflation. Those most in need will receive
$120 more a year than under the current system. The vast majority
of seniors will be as well or better off.
Those 60 and older on December 31, 1995 can opt for the new
system or the old one, whichever is more advantageous. The Prime
Minister's commitment to our senior citizens will be met and
surpassed.
There will also be fairer, more affordable tax assistance for
retirement savings. The government is committed to assisting
individuals to save for their retirement. At the same time, our fiscal
position calls for reasonable limits on the amount that can be saved
with tax assistance.
For this reason RRSP contribution limits will be frozen at
$13,500 through to the year 2003 but then will increase to $15,500
by the year 2005. These measures will affect only individuals
earning over $75,000. Thus, individuals earning less will continue
to be able to save up to the full 18 per cent of their earnings.
This is consistent with the government's objective of directing
tax assistance to the large population of modest and middle income
Canadians. Because our younger population is facing different
challenges we have eliminated the seven year limit on carrying
forward unused RRSP contribution room.
The budget also introduces improved tax treatment, new
guidelines and better enforcement to ensure that adequate child
support is paid regularly and on time to the custodial parent.
We are now in a situation in which six out of ten children who
live with lone parent mothers are living below Statistics Canada's
low income cutoffs.
The Thibaudeau case in the Supreme Court simply brought home
what many had been saying for years. We have to make it simpler,
faster and more efficient to get child support into the hands of the
parents to the benefit of the children.
The government consulted the Canadian public widely on this
point. It became clear that few Canadians think it is right to tax
child support as though it were the custodial parent's own income.
Nor should the person paying the support receive a special tax
break merely for performing the ordinary obligations of a parent.
For this reason, child support will no longer be included in the
taxable income of the custodial parent, nor will it be deductible to
the payer. Custodial parents will no longer have to worry about
setting aside a portion of the support they receive to pay taxes on
the amounts and payers of the support will not have to make high
payments and then wait for the deduction at year's end.
(1635 )
The working income supplement of the child tax benefit is
intended to help low income parents meet the costs of things like
transportation and child care when they go out to work. It can also
help to compensate for the loss of certain material benefits which
parents lose when they go off social assistance to enter the labour
force.
To encourage this type of initiative and to help low income
families make the transition we are doubling the maximum annual
benefit in two stages from its current level of $500 to $750 in 1997
and $1,000 in 1998.
When it is fully implemented, Canada's low income working
families will have an extra $250 million annually to assist them
with their child care expenses. About one-third of the families
eligible for these benefits are single parents. We will thus be
targeting what we have identified as a serious locus of child
poverty.
The government has taken a number of actions to reallocate
funds to increase Canada's investment in youth, technology and
trade, all very important areas to Canada's future. To encourage
education for young Canadians an additional $165 million over
three years is being funded by reallocating money from within the
tax system. We are increasing the limits on education tax credits,
the limit on the transfer of tuition in education credits and the limit
on contributions to registered education savings plans.
There will be more flexible child care expense deductions for
low income parents who are in school or attending training
programs.
We are creating new employment opportunities for youth by
reallocating budget savings. We will double the funds for student
summer employment to $120 million this summer. We will
increase support for programs like Internship Canada and Youth
Services Canada to help young people who have left school to find
employment opportunities.
Canada is a nation at the cutting edge of high technology. To
ensure our continued predominance in this field, the government is
establishing the Technology Partnerships Canada. This new fund
will encourage private sector investment in high technology
products and processes and assist in technology diffusion. New
equity capital will be made available to increase the lending efforts
of the Business Development Bank in strategic growth sectors such
as the new technology area.
When this government took office it was charged with a double
task: to address Canada's increasing fiscal burden without
destroying the social fabric that has made this country one of the
most
1483
admired in the world. We can achieve this only by ensuring the
kind of economic health that made our unique social system
possible in the first place.
The government has followed its jobs and growth agenda with
one clear objective: to build an innovative economy that will mean
prosperity for all Canadians. We are succeeding. Employment in
the first quarter was up by 91,000, the largest quarterly growth in
two years. The overall unemployment rate is down nearly two
points from 11.1 per cent to 9.3 per cent. Interest rates are down
and inflation is at its lowest level in 30 years.
Let us give credit where credit is due: to the Canadian people for
their resourcefulness in a difficult time, to the private sector for its
willingness to partnership and to explore innovative ways of doing
business and sharing and joining with government, and to the
Minister of Finance for his sure and measured handling of our
national finances.
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Madam Speaker, I
commend the member for her very clear message.
There are two questions I would like to ask her. The first one
centres on the child support payments and the changes there. I
believe those changes will cause some concern across the country.
The non-custodial parents who have contacted me are very
concerned about something that is not mentioned in the proposed
bill that will be coming forward, their visiting rights and access
rights the courts grant them and which are not lived up to by the
custodial parent.
I ask the hon. member if she believes that the visiting and access
rights should be linked with the child support payments.
My other question is whether the member sees a danger in the
rising debt inasmuch as the interest payments that we have to make
on the debt are drawing away from the revenue dollars we need to
support our social programs.
(1640 )
Mrs. Barnes: Madam Speaker, I thank the hon. member for his
question.
When there is change there is anxiety about the change. It is true
that people will call into a constituency office and say they are
worried about the specifics of change which they think could
adversely affect them immediately.
The first thing we must say is that there will be clear material
given to people so they may understand the changes coming. With
this budget we put out a special tax booklet identifying all the
questions and answers relating to the changes in support payments.
We did another interesting thing relating to Revenue Canada. We
allowed Revenue Canada, after the request from the Justice
Department, to get information necessary to enforce payments of
delinquent supporters. I believe this measure will go a long way.
I want to make it clear that Revenue Canada will not be releasing
addresses to individuals requesting that information. However, we
have done something to help with enforcement.
The changes we are talking about do not relate to visitation
rights. That is not what we are talking about here. We are talking
about tax treatment, a tax policy that will be implemented through
the self-assessment process at Revenue Canada, which is the most
successful in the world. Canadian taxpayers are honest for the most
part. We are hoping to enhance the livelihood and to help with the
real economic needs of children in homes where money is due to
them from a non-custodial parent. We are changing the tax
treatment to make it more efficient, more simple and faster. There
will be concerns.
As a government we will spend money to assist in the
administrative changes necessary. I can assure the House that the
changes were necessary and were done after massive consultations.
Members of the government crossed the country over a year ago
asking for input from custodial parents. We got the input and we
listened. Finally, after nearly a half a century of one system we are
about to change and modernize our laws.
[Translation]
Mrs. Pauline Picard (Drummond, BQ): Madam Speaker, I am
pleased to take part in the debate on the recent budget tabled by the
Minister of Finance. We would have preferred to comment on a
budget showing the government's determination to be more
effective and to reduce its size and its non-productive interference.
However, this is not the case.
We would have liked a budget showing that the government has
a minimum of compassion and is sensitive to the plight of our 1.4
million fellow citizens who are jobless and who realize every day
that the election promises of ``jobs, jobs, jobs'' were nothing but
empty words. Unfortunately, there is no compassion for the
unemployed in this budget.
We would have liked a budget showing that the government got
the message that we, on this side of the House, have been
conveying to it for two and a half years by reminding it of the
urgent need to restore justice and tax fairness for overburdened
average taxpayers, while companies avoid paying taxes on record
profits. Again, this is unfortunately not the case.
We would have liked a budget showing that the federal
government had finally decided to put its house in order, instead of
resorting to the easier solution of leaving to others the
responsibility of taking real measures by dumping its deficit onto
the provinces. Unfortunately, this is not the case. The budget that
we have to comment on is not of the courageous type. What the
Minister of Finance has tabled is in fact a non-budget. It is a kind of
economic statement on the country's financial situation, in which
everything is explained by magic, that is as a percentage of the
GDP, rather than by using actual figures. It is an economic
statement which does not propose any real and effective measure to
1484
face the problems that confront us and that can be summarized in
very simple and concrete terms: 1.4 million unemployed and a debt
of $600 billion.
(1645)
Expressing reality in hard figures, rather than projecting it
through the rose coloured filter of percentages of GDP, is harsher,
as well as less savvy from the political point of view. Harsher,
because behind these real figures are real human beings, people
who each and every day face the hard reality, real problems, and
people who are getting more and more worried.
It is very sad to realize that a sizeable number of our fellow
citizens are no longer concerned by government administration,
have lost their illusions, can no longer relate to all of the
contradictions coming from this government, contradictions
raining down on their heads every day about administration,
taxation, social services, as well as constitutional matters.
Understandably so. This government had promised
employment-remember the red book refrain of jobs, jobs,
jobs-and held out great hopes, for young people in particular. But
their imagination dried up after they came up with the red book
slogan. There had been a government promise to do away with the
GST. The Prime Minister said he was going to scrap it, and the
Deputy Prime Minister said she would resign if that was not done.
This government's imagination was hard pressed to find the most
effective means of trying to say what had not been said, and of
convincing people that they had not heard correctly.
What people were meant to hear was not that the GST would
disappear. What they were meant to understand was that, in light of
the present economic situation, and in order to keep the deficit at 3
per cent of the GDP, the GST would have to be harmonized by
adding the provincial taxes to it. That is what the members of the
government would now like people to have understood, although
their main campaign slogan was something quite different.
Strangely enough, today the Minister of Finance is using the
same expressions, when speaking on the GST, as the Conservatives
used during the election campaign. Within two and a half years,
then, our Liberal friends have, in addition to reneging on their
promise, espoused the same position as the Conservatives, a
position they had so emphatically decried. The government does
the opposite of what it says; no wonder our fellow citizens have so
little confidence in their political leaders.
Another one of this government's contradictions is its
commitment to streamline the federal bureaucracy and make it
more productive. They promised the people they would cut fat in
order to preserve social programs. What the government is saying
in this year's budget is that there is no more fat to be cut in the
bureaucracy, when most of our fellow citizens feel that the federal
government is living high off the hog.
In fact, as the finance minister's figures confirm, the real budget
savings will amount to 0.0 per cent in 1996-97-which is nothing
to write home about-and to around 0.2 per cent in 1997-98. We
can only conclude that the government feels there is no more to be
done in its own backyard and has given up on the greater challenge
of reducing the size of the public service. It is, of course, easier to
take over the UI fund, cut transfer payments to the provinces, and
let others deal with the problems.
The government has brought down a budget with few real
measures to stimulate the economy. Yet this budget clearly shows
the government's inability to resolve three nation wide problems:
the employment crisis, the debt crisis and the constitutional crisis.
This budget contains no concrete measures for the jobless. The
government boasts about injecting another $60 million into the
summer student employment program and investing $150 million
in the technological innovation fund.
(1650)
It forgot to mention that what it gives with one hand, it had taken
away several times with the other. It cut post-secondary education
by $150 million plus another $300 million in 1997-98. In the
1995-96 budget, it cut $32 million from research and development
for the Canadian Space Agency, $65 million from the three
granting councils, and $11 million from the National Research
Council. Those are the facts.
The government fails to provide tax incentives to promote job
creation, helps itself to the UI fund instead of lowering premiums,
and cuts benefits to workers' venture capital corporations whose
sole purpose is to create and maintain jobs by investing in small
and medium size businesses. This budget does not stimulate
employment, it stifles job creation.
This budget does not contain any new government debt or deficit
reduction initiative. Instead of putting its own house in order, the
government is shovelling its problems into the neighbours'
backyards. The provinces end up having to bear the brunt of the
federal deficit reduction effort. While the federal debt has grown
by $133 billion since the Liberal took office, tax shelters remain
and unnecessary spending continues, including outrageous military
spending.
Finally, this budget increases federal government's interference
in areas of jurisdiction that are not its own, which is where the very
essence of the constitutional crisis in Canada rests. Instead of
showing goodwill and withdrawing from areas of provincial
jurisdiction, the government is devising new initiatives to interfere
even further while continuing to spend and getting deeper and
deeper into debt. Three new angles has been found to undermine
the
1485
provinces' autonomy, namely the health research fund, the Canada
revenue commission and the Canadian securities commission.
This is how, after tabling three budgets, this government has lost
any credibility it may have had. It had promised to eliminate the
GST, to create jobs, and to steer clear of constitutional matters. It
has reneged on its promise in every instance. The people of Quebec
and Canada can no longer trust this government.
[English]
Mr. Alex Shepherd (Durham, Lib.): Madam Speaker, I heard
the hon. member say in her speech that jobs had not been created.
It always amazes me when opposition members talk that way.
All they have to do is get a copy of a report by Statistics Canada
and they can see that well over 500,000 new jobs have been created
since the last election. In fact, for the last quarter, just about every
month there has been new job creation in Canada.
Second, long ago the province of Quebec harmonized with the
GST. I will tell the House why this is a good thing for Quebec and
Canada and how governments should co-operate and work
together. Manufacturers in the province of Quebec have the ability
not to include retail sales taxes in the sale of manufactured goods
for export. Quebec was clever enough to notice the advantages of
harmonizing the GST.
Unfortunately my province of Ontario does not see that. Where I
live General Motors is a major manufacturer. The manufacture of
automobiles in Ontario includes a certain element of retail sales
tax. That gives Quebec a tactical advantage over Ontario in the
export of automobiles to the North American market.
I would like to suggest to the member that rather than attacking
some of the advantages of harmonization, she should be applauding
the government for its foresight in trying to apply the
harmonization method that has been used in Quebec across the rest
of this country.
Finally, I would like to suggest that if she contacts Statistics
Canada it will tell her the net new job growth on a month to month
basis. She will see that we have been very successful in creating
new jobs in Canada.
[Translation]
Mrs. Picard: Madam Speaker, I will repeat what I said when
responding to the speech from the Throne.
(1655)
In this budget, taxpayers expected the government to take
important measures to get its finances in order and create jobs.
Given that 1.4 million people are out of work, the Minister of
Finance could have shown a minimum of compassion by
introducing job creation initiatives. This is what matters at this
point in time.
I am not an expert in the fields of finance and economy, but I do
know, like everyone else, that when people have jobs, they pay
taxes and that helps the economy. Putting people to work might
help reduce the deficit. However, as long as the government keeps
trying to cut here and there, particularly at the expense of the poor
and of the unemployed who truly need help to find work, it will not
succeed in promoting economic recovery.
Mr. Gaston Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe, BQ): Madam
Speaker, as official opposition critic for heritage and cultural
industries, I cannot stop myself from referring to the throne speech
in my response to the budget speech.
What is written in the conclusion to the throne speech must be
noted as something of great importance to the cultural industries,
``Culture is at the core of our identity as Canadians. The
Government is committed to strong Canadian cultural industries''.
This speech also confirms the government's desire to ensure the
viability of the CBC, the National Film Board and Telefilm
Canada. The statements of principle in the Minister of Finance's
speech are, however, unequivocal. The Liberals want to reduce
expenditures, while at the same time encouraging improved job
prospects. Such a contradiction! Regrowth and reducing
expenditures in the same breath. They claim to have a strategy
which works via reallocation.
Let us be serious now. Contradictions do not belong in
administration. The Liberals are full of great statements of intent,
which we all know very well they have no intention of putting into
practice. This government's sole objective is to make cuts, and its
true cultural policy is to make cuts in culture. With a policy applied
to strategic sectors that is threatening social cohesion through
massive budget cuts, and threatening economic growth through a
systematic layoff policy, we cannot look at the future with any
hope.
Yet, if there is one sector that is strategic for maintaining
cohesion and social equilibrium in Canada and in Quebec, it is
culture. And what is this government doing? In the Liberal Party of
Canada's budget, national cultural institutions are facing cuts of 9.7
per cent. Telefilm Canada, the NFB and the National Archives are
the most affected, moreover. Let us take an example. The CBC
alone is being hit the hardest, with cuts of $102 million between
fiscal 1995-96 and fiscal 1996-97. According to Mr. Beatty, its
president, there will be additional cuts of $48 million.
Telefilm Canada will face cuts of $19 million in the upcoming
fiscal year just when it is looking at the possibility of going
multimedia. The National Film Board alone will be hit with cuts of
$10 million on top of the $16 million cuts in the 1994-95 budget.
1486
(1700)
The National Archives will be cut by $11 million. Publishing
support programs will be cut by $14 million, and the heritage and
cultural development program will cut by $22 million in the
coming fiscal year. Contributions to the cultural infrastructures
project will be cut by 69 per cent in 1996-97, on top of the 44 per
cent in 1995-96. This is totally unacceptable.
I ask this House if this the expression of a desire to develop
cultural industries in Quebec and Canada. How can the Liberals
claim to be promoting job creation with such cuts? How do we
assure the long term viability of the CBC, the NFB and Telefilm
Canada? When the government systematically cuts the operating
budgets of these organizations, there is no guarantee of a future.
When everyone knows the importance of our cultural
institutions, how do we convince the government that it is heading
in the wrong direction? This lack of political will to develop the
cultural industries is having a dramatic impact, let us face the facts,
on lost jobs.
The $227 million cut from the CBC since 1995 represents 2,400
lost jobs, and the forecast cuts of $150 million between 1996 and
1999 will mean another 2,500 positions, making a total of 4,900
jobs lost in the years the government is giving expression to its
alleged intention to develop Canada's cultural industries.
Such job losses have a significant impact on the cultural fabric of
society in Quebec and Canada. Culture is made up of real people:
actors, screenwriters, authors, musicians, performers, composers,
model makers, make-up artists, costume designers, scenic artists,
and others. They are the raw material of cultural creation and
production. The very essence of our identity could be ruined and
driven to despair by this Liberal government's extensive cuts and
lack of strategy, vision and policy in cultural matters.
The prospect of an Anglo-American culture threatens our
culture, as everyone knows. The Canadian Minister of Finance's
budget is a major culprit, as it jeopardizes the very existence of our
cultural industries.
That is one of the reasons why the Government of Quebec claims
full responsibility for the management of its share of the federal
funds allocated to cultural industries. The federal government's
estimates for heritage and cultural industries directly threaten all of
us as a culture. In these circumstances, the Bloc Quebecois, as the
official opposition, urges Ottawa to withdraw from the whole area
of culture and communications. While the Government of Quebec
was increasing its contribution to cultural funding by 4 per cent a
year and its share of all public expenditures affecting Quebec
culture from 32 to 37 per cent, the federal government's
contribution fell from 45 per cent in 1989-90 to 34 per cent five
years later.
According to Louise Beaudoin, Quebec's Minister of Culture
and Communications and Minister responsible for the
Administration of the Charter of the French Language, although
Quebec makes the greatest effort in Canada, it is not enough to
compensate for the federal government's gradual withdrawal from
culture. It is certainly logical.
(1705)
At a time when Quebec is taking action and increasing its
budgets to ensure the viability and development of its culture, the
federal government continues to withdraw and to cut funding. The
Government of Quebec has no use for the more or less political
goals pursued by the Department of Canadian Heritage through the
distribution of millions of flags. At a time when everything is being
cut, they suddenly found $17 million and hired 10 full time
telephone operators to handle callers who want the flags promised
to them by some deputy minister. As we speak, at a time when
everybody is being hit by budget cuts, including those who create
our culture, who guarantee our identity and development, they have
just spent close to $7 million.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the Ottawa River, the federal
government plans to reduce the funds spent on culture, something
that would greatly compromise our cultural future.
In closing, this budget shows once again the government's
inconsistency and lack of vision and respect for Quebec culture.
We must, however, admit that the federal Liberal government is
true to itself, making and breaking its own promises as it pleases.
Mrs. Eleni Bakopanos (Saint-Denis, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, what
our friend opposite said about protecting culture is most
interesting. A question comes to mind however: What culture is
that? The Canadian culture, which includes the Quebec culture? Or
are all cultures lumped into one?
I think the best way to protect a culture, a language or a people,
as our friends opposite would say, is through the Canadian
government, the federal government, as opposed to the provincial
level of government. The measures we have adopted in this budget
are but one way of ensuring that a typically Canadian culture is
preserved, so to speak.
Mrs. Picard: That is blackmail.
Mrs. Bakopanos: Blackmail yourself, Madam. Let me speak.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I understand that the debate
could excite emotions and even convictions, but I nevertheless ask
the co-operation of the House in please addressing the Chair when
making remarks.
Mrs. Bakopanos: Mr. Speaker, the opposition keeps attacking
the budget put forth by our government by using intimidation
1487
regarding the culture preservation issue. As I said before, as did
several other speakers, the budget has put in place measures to
ensure that funds are available to preserve our culture as weknow it.
The fact remains that culture-perhaps the opposition will
disagree-is something that evolves. There is no such thing as an
unchanging culture. It grows and gets better over time.
Moving to other budget issues raised by the hon. member, the
preservation of our social programs and the sacrifices that had to be
made in the system we have enjoyed in Canada, we can be thankful
for the measures that we have taken as a government to ensure that
sufficient funding will be available to continue preserving the
French language across Canada and preserving French language
programming across Canada. The survival of the French-Canadian
language and culture in Canada is guaranteed through the measures
put forward in this House by the Minister of Finance to ensure that
funds will be available.
Mr. Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe): Mr. Speaker, I wonder on
which planet the hon. member for Saint-Denis lives, given what
she said about subsidies being given to French speaking
communities everywhere. She should reread this blue document
called the budget. She will realize that there are cuts, year after
year, and that the assimilation rate keeps growing. It is time the
hon. member woke up.
(1710)
The hon. member claims that her government provides many
good things in its budget for culture. Let me just remind her of a
few facts which she does not appear to have figured out: the CBC,
cuts totalling $150 million and close to 5,000 jobs eliminated;
Telefilm Canada, cuts of $19 million; the National Film Board, cuts
of $10 million; the National Archives, cuts of $11 million; the
writing and publications program-books are important, our
authors tell our story-cuts of $14 million; heritage programs,
cultural development, cuts of $22 million.
Please, wake up. These are cuts, not support. These are cuts and
when cuts are made, it results in a reduction, not an increase, in
production and in the number of jobs.
It is time to wake up and realize that the budget tabled in this
House does not promote cultural development and does not in any
way support one of the main recommendations made in the Juneau
report, which provides that we should not only ensure the
recognition of our cultural institutions such as the CBC, Telefilm
and the National Film Board, but also their long term funding. Not
only does this budget not follow up on these recommendations,
which have gained unanimous support, but it also cuts everywhere,
thus creating losses of jobs and services, while jeopardizing
cultural development as a whole.
[English]
Mr. Harbance Singh Dhaliwal (Vancouver South, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, it is my pleasure to speak to the budget which was
introduced by my hon. colleague, the Minister of Finance.
There has been much discussion both in the House and in the
homes of Canadians since the budget was brought down in early
March. The overwhelming consensus is that truly this is an
outstanding budget. Editorials from St. John's to Vancouver have
hailed it as a major step forward in the fight against the deficit and
to protect social programs. I know the Reform members would not
know much about social programs.
Let us look at the economic and fiscal framework in which the
budget is presented. We should take a moment to recognize the
achievements of this minister. First of all, his tenure in the finance
portfolio has been marked by a measured, balanced and disciplined
action.
Let me just repeat for some of my colleagues that this is a
balanced and measured approach. I know some members would say
that we have to cut and chop everything out of government.
However, Canadians see that the position the government and the
minister have taken to have a balanced approach. An approach
where we deal with the deficit on a year by year basis is the right
approach, instead of ignoring the problem which some of our
members would like to do. Other members would like to slash and
burn. As Liberals we know that is not the right way.
When the Liberals took office, the country's finances were in a
disastrous state. There was no vision and no plan. Under the
finance minister's stewardship, the government has worked with
Canadians to craft a sound economic vision for the future.
The Liberals realize that the deficit, employment, economic
growth, inflation and taxation are all interrelated. That is why we
need a sound economic vision for the future of our country. That is
why the budgets have been structured with an integrated economic
framework.
Just two and a half years after the Liberals assumed office the
outlook for Canada is much brighter. The results of the fiscal
framework are the following.
(1715 )
For example, short term interest rates have fallen by three
percentage points in the last year alone. Imagine how much money
Canadians are saving. People who have mortgages, people who
finance their automobiles are saving a lot because short term
interest rates have dropped. Something which I did not think would
happen has happened. Overnight, interest rates are now lower than
those in the U.S. This is a sign that the markets have confidence in
this government and its economic policies.
1488
In the last 13 months 263,000 jobs have been created. Since
1993 some 600,000 jobs have been created in the Canadian
economy. Inflation is the lowest it has been in 30 years, reflecting
solid productivity growth and virtual absence of cost pressures.
Let us compare Canada to other countries. On an international
basis relative to other G-7 countries, our finances appear to be on a
sound footing. Our financial requirements, deficit to GDP, our rate
of inflation and unit labour costs are all looking good when we
compare them to the G-7 countries. Of course, we cannot rest on
our laurels for there is still work to be done but these numbers are
sure signs that progress is evident.
We have seen in the international community how much more
confidence there is by looking at interest rates, by looking at the
targets we have met. So far we have been able to meet and do better
on every target. The international community has a tremendous
amount of confidence in us for when we say we will deal with the
deficit we do, not through words but by action.
This budget represents another important part of our coherent
and integrated plan to modernize government and to put in place
the fiscal ingredients for a prosperous Canadian economy.
The major thrust of the budget is the future. Specifically, it
speaks to our future by restoring health to public finances, defining
a more appropriate role for the federal government in today's
economy and federation, and by taking direct action to secure
social programs for the future. It is very important to emphasize
that we are taking direct action to secure our social programs,
laying out a plan to restore confidence in our public pension
system.
As the finance minister indicated in his budget speech on March
6, this budget is about addressing problems before they arise. It is
about managing ahead and continuing to put in place new building
blocks for security and prosperity. This is important because as we
know we are in an age where social and economic transformation is
occurring at a frightening speed.
Looking at the budget we can recognize the change that is
coming in our society, the roles that information and technology
are playing. That is why we are investing in those areas. That is
why we are investing in our young people who are getting involved
in helping small businesses take advantage of the information
technology.
In British Columbia young people are working with small
businesses. We as a government along with the private sector have
said that we need to make sure that small businesses take advantage
of the existing technology. That is why we are trying to bring our
youth and small business together on programs that will take
advantage of the information technologies.
That is why Canadians have given this budget glowing reviews.
It minimizes the uncertainty of our future by simultaneously
creating economic opportunity and safeguarding our cherished
social programs.
British Columbians are very satisfied with the budget. I want to
take this opportunity to explain why this budget is a good one for
British Columbia.
Many of the Reformers are very supportive of this budget,
particularly on our success in dealing with the deficit. Reformers
have to understand that this government will not gut our social
programs like they would do, nor would we destroy our cultural
industries like Reformers would do. We will continue to ensure that
we have social programs and that we support our cultural industries
as this budget does.
(1720)
The reaction in my home province and in my riding has been
overwhelmingly positive. That is why the Liberals are over 50 per
cent in the polls in British Columbia and Reformers are down to 20
per cent or less in British Columbia. They only have one issue and
that is the deficit and it is no longer an issue because we have
broken the back of the deficit. They are looking for other issues all
the time and are unable to find them.
There are three or four issues which are near and dear to the
hearts of the citizens of my province and the people of my riding.
We all know the figures by now so there is no need to reiterate
them. Perhaps we should ask why our success in reducing the
deficit is important. There is a link between deficits and our goal of
jobs and growth. That is our ultimate goal, jobs and growth. We
want to create an environment where the private sector can create
those jobs and growth.
Pursuing a lower deficit helps to keep our inflation and our
interest rates low. Low inflation helps to smooth the bumps of the
boom and bust economic cycle. It also helps to keep interest rates
low. Low interest rates in turn help to stimulate demand in interest
sensitive industries, foster high levels of investment and keep
Canada competitive relative to our global competitors.
We have started this process of fiscal recovery. By doing this we
can eventually attack the debt, and we will attack the debt, which as
we all know consumes more than one-third of federal revenues. For
the first time in decades, British Columbians know that when the
finance minister says he will balance the books there is real
substance behind the promise.
This budget speaks volumes about the differences that exist
between this government and other parties in the House. The
Liberals are a true national party which effectively represents all
Canada's regions and people across the political spectrum.
Members of the Reform Party say theirs is a national party but
we have not seen that. In every byelection the Reform Party has
1489
not been able to prove it is a national party. It has been a disaster. In
not one of the byelections was the Reform Party able to make any
substantial effort or win any seats. Reformers have a long way to go
to prove it.
The Liberals are a true national party which effectively represent
all of Canada's regions and people across the political spectrum.
We do this by providing government that is open, honest, forthright
and rational. We recognize there is a fundamental need to change
the way government works. We have not retreated from the task of
bringing Canada into the 21st century. Instead we have
enthusiastically embraced this challenge by recognizing that
difficult decisions must be made.
In making these decisions we have found the balance between
retrenchment and social justice. We have shown Canadians and
indeed people around the world that it is possible to protect the
social safety net while restoring integrity to our nation's finances.
Mr. Ken Epp (Elk Island, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I would like to
ask the member a very short, directly answerable question. I would
like to place a bet with you, Mr. Speaker, that he will not answer it.
I cannot do that, I am sorry.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I have been known to take a
flyer or two on a few tips but I do not think we should engage in
that sort of game.
Mr. Epp: My apologies, Mr. Speaker. We will have to see how
this speculation ends.
The hon. member knows a lot about business. If he were the
chief executive officer of a corporation and when he took over the
debt in that corporation was around $40 million and after four years
it had grown to $50 million, would he be applauded by the
shareholders? I would like the hon. member to give me a yes or no
answer and I think he will not.
(1725 )
Mr. Dhaliwal: Mr. Speaker, if the hon. member is concerned
about direct answers he should talk to his leader. The last time I
asked him a direct question about his party's stand on the turban
issue with the RCMP, the leader of the Reform Party refused to
answer. I am glad that some of the members have now brought this
forward as an issue and they may deal with it at the next
convention. If the member wants a direct answer he should start by
talking to his leader so that he does give a direct answer when he is
asked a question in the House.
In terms of corporations let me say that government is not a
corporation. Some members of the Reform Party have to learn that
you cannot try to compare a corporation with government. In
government we are dealing with people. We are not dealing with
the bottom line.
It used to be said that what is good for GM is good for this
country. We have learned that sometimes what is good for
corporations is not good for the general population. It is not good
for Canadians. We are ensuring that we have a vision for the long
term for our future generations, for our children, our grandchildren
and their grandchildren. We do not look at just the bottom line. We
look at our future to make sure that we have a quality of life we can
be proud of and we can tell our future generations that we worked
toward that. We cannot compare a corporation and government.
We are concerned with the debt. The first thing we said as a
government was that we were going to deal with the deficit. We
cannot deal with the debt unless we deal with the deficit. We have
put forward a constructive program to deal with the deficit. The
international community knows that when we say we are going to
deal with it we are dealing with it.
Once we have dealt with the deficit the next step obviously is to
deal with the debt. We will be dealing with it but we have to do it in
a balanced, rational and a measured approach so that we ensure we
are sensitive to the human dimension of cutting deficits and cutting
budgets. The way we are doing it will be seen in history as the right
way.
Mr. Leon E. Benoit (Vegreville, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, since this
government has come into office and as a result of the budgets the
finance minister has put forth so far the debt will increase by about
$120 billion. The debt is ever increasing with no sign of that
increase ending.
The government has made some cuts in spending but those cuts
have been more than lost due to increases in the interest payments
it takes to service the debt. The only reason deficits are decreasing
in the projections is due to increased revenue, more money brought
in by this government from taxpayers. Is this situation satisfactory
to the member?
Mr. Dhaliwal: Mr. Speaker, first let me correct the facts. For
every seven dollars cut there is only one dollar on the revenue side
in action taken by the government. We have cut seven dollars for
every one dollar of revenue whether it is through fees or in some
other way. It is not accurate to say that most of the changes came
about as a result of a change to the revenue side.
The approach this government has taken has not been to cut
everything by 10 per cent or 20 per cent. We said let us look at
government and see where we can improve, where we need to cut
and where we need to add. Let us see where we need to add more
money to government so that we have a core government, that we
have an efficient government and we have a government that is
working for the people of this country and not just a straight
percentage cut everywhere. That is why we looked at the priorities
of what is important for Canadians before we made the changes
that we did in the budget.
1490
Ms. Albina Guarnieri (Mississauga East, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
in less than a single full term in office this government has
managed to cut the national deficit by $20 billion and at the same
time cut the unemployment rate by a full two percentage points.
Canadians can have more confidence in how they are governed
now that they have a Minister of Finance who sets and reaches
ambitious fiscal goals without the destructive consequences of
public service walkouts or wholesale elimination of service.
Successes come from abandoning the failed policies of
governments past.
(1730)
A sixty per cent cut in subsidies to business was born from the
realization that little can be gained by collecting taxes from
business with the sole purpose of redirecting the same dollars to the
same businesses through subsidies and grants. We have learned that
the value of targeting funds is small and more than offset by the
consequences of increased taxation, administrative overhead and
the cost to business of hiring consultants and lobbyists to apply for
grants.
It was a typical case in the previous regime that $100 would be
taxed away from an industry with $1 or $2 spent in the collection
process, as much as $20 more spent on grant administration and the
remaining $78 dollars would be handed out to business as a great
gift. However, $15 had already been spent by business trying to get
its tax money back by hiring consultants and applying for grants.
At the end of the rinse cycle industry would be about 35 per cent
better off had the government just stayed away. We have done away
with tax and grant government. We no longer believe that the role
of government is to seize and reinvest the earnings of private
corporations.
Rarely has economic success ever been built on temporary
grants and subsidies. It is true the odd business may be lured to set
up a factory by the promise of grants, tax credits or some other
concession paid for by the local businesses. It is also true that often
these factories vanish as soon as the locks get changed at the house
of the free money.
Government grants impose a psychology on business that slows
sustainable job creation as entrepreneurs wait for handouts rather
than accept private sector funding under market conditions. It is not
rare to hear of a small business owner planning an expansion which
might create 100 jobs. Typically the entrepreneur could find the
money needed from private resources or a bank or venture
capitalist, but then the prospect of the government grant would get
in the way.
The entrepreneur would start spending his time visiting
bureaucrats, filling out forms, preparing his case. Pretty soon he
would get frustrated and hire a consultant who specialized in
positioning companies for grants. The process would drag on for
months. A hundred people were still out of work but our
entrepreneur would sense the competition. If he did not get a grant
his competitor might then be able to undercut his price. He would
have to press on. More months would pass with still no word, still
more consulting fees, still no jobs created.
Finally there would be a sigh of relief with rejection letters from
all granting agencies. Now our entrepreneur could actually carry on
his business, creating jobs by using private sector resources for
private sector results.
Many forms of subsidy will remain in selected fields and to
support exports. Generally business is being freed of having to
apply to government for funds to stay competitive.
Overwhelmingly the government is being reduced to a level that
can actually be understood by citizens who are too busy working
and paying taxes to study every branch or tentacle funded by their
tax dollars.
The confidence the public has shown in the government and the
Minister of Finance arises from our efforts to limit government to
its original and irreproachable aims. In 1997-98 total program
spending will fall to about $106 billion. Fifty-four per cent of this
spending will go to seniors, the unemployed and to the provinces to
support education, health and other social programs. Business
subsidies by contrast will account for barely one and one-half per
cent of program spending.
By the conclusion of our first term in office, the taxpayer will be
comforted to know that fewer and fewer hard earned tax dollars are
leaking away from the core of government's role. Government will
soon be able to say it is doing only what it does best which no one
else will do.
Our role is largely to redistribute cash to help seniors, the
unemployed, low income earners, provinces with smaller per
capita tax bases as well as support our national medicare system
and affordable post-secondary education.
(1735 )
Some have criticized these programs, saying their home
province is spending more than it receives, say from the
employment insurance plan. This plan is about people, not about
provinces. It is intended to treat individuals fairly according to the
unemployment levels they face where they live.
Politicians in wealthier provinces who protest relief going to
people in need in other provinces represent a view of the country
shared by Lucien Bouchard, always calculating their share,
discounting what they receive, focusing on any area where they pay
more than they get back and never viewing Canadians as equal
members of a single nature who have a long history of helping each
other through hard times.
1491
This 1996 budget does not give in to regional parochialism or
selfishness. It preserves the Canadian sense of community by
sustaining our social fabric while finding necessary savings in
subsidies, administration and by closing tax loopholes.
In short, we have reduced Canada's deficit without reducing
Canada.
Mr. Elwin Hermanson (Kindersley-Lloydminster, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, I have been in the House for a while now listening to
some of the Liberal members who spoke. I have to admit that most
of what they say sounds like it has been written by a speech writer
in an office tower who is totally unattached to Canadian reality.
There is an occasional paragraph in some of the speeches where
a few words have been added, but most of it sounds like pure
political drivel by someone in the finance department trying to
justify a rather uninspiring budget with accolades that are not
shared by Canadians and which do not reflect the response Liberal
members are getting from their constituents.
When looking at the budget we begin to see there are perhaps
some changes coming for old age pensions and for CPP. There are
some signs that perhaps the Liberals will not keep their promises.
Liberals are great for not keeping their promises. They changed
their minds on the free trade agreement. They said it was terrible
and now they support the free trade agreement.
They said some things about the GST and they have been back
pedalling awfully hard on that one. Why should Canadians believe
one thing these Liberals are saying?
I believe that because of the fiscal mismanagement of the
country, one day the Liberals will have to get up in the House and
say: ``Sorry, old age pensioners, you will lose your old age pension
even if you are low income''. They will say: ``Sorry, we
mismanaged your CPP funds and you will lose them. We meant to
tell you sooner, but we just did not get around to it''. They will tell
our young people: ``Sorry, we have to raise your taxes. We did not
do things quite right in the past. It just kind of crept up on us. We
did not mean it to happen. That is the reality of the times''.
Our debt is increasing at an enormous rate. In spite of all the
drivel we hear from the Liberal members, the truth is our debt has
increased by almost $100 billion since the Liberals took over and
the interest payments on the debt are approaching $50 billion every
year. This from a government that only gets a little over $100
billion in revenue each year and is spending about $160 billion
each year. It is atrocious. It is terrible.
I wish the Liberals would come to their senses and recognize the
seriousness of the situation and be prepared to do something
constructive about it before they lose all of the so-called social
safety nets they claim to be the champions of. It will be the Liberals
who will destroy all of our social safety nets by pretending there is
nothing wrong with their budgets or with the ongoing deficits they
have been ringing up not only in this decade but in previous
decades to the tune of almost $600 billion to date.
I had to get that off my chest because I am extremely upset that
they would mislead the Canadian people by letting them think
everything is okay.
I want to direct most of my speech today to the agricultural
perspective of the budget. As agriculture critic I am very concerned
about what the budget states with regard to agricultural issues.
There are a few issues that need to be discussed today.
There was a formal announcement in the budget of the
government selling off 13,000 grain hopper cars. This was not
much of a surprise because it had been discussed and the
government's intention had been made known before the budget
was release. It became very clear the government was prepared to
go ahead when the budget was released in March.
(1740 )
The so-called SEO group, the senior executive officers, made up
of executives of the railways, elevators and other key players in the
grain industry was set up last year by the federal government to
develop a set of recommendations regarding future grain
transportation systems in western Canada. In its set of
recommendations to the Department of Transport and Department
of Agriculture and Agri-Food last fall, the disposal of the hopper
car fleet was considered. The railways would purchase these
13,000 cars on the condition that they be used to transport western
grain. The cars would be sold for $100 million and the purchase
cost would be recovered over five years through an approximate
one dollar a tonne rate increase in transporting grains.
This all seems to be going down the drain. The recommendations
for the car disposition seems to be derailed and any idea that the
railways will be receiving the cars is very slim at the current time,
which is not necessarily bad. Subsequently, a coalition of farm
groups has banded together to develop proposals to buy the hopper
cars. The primary objective of the coalition is that all 13,000 cars
be sold together, that they be operated as a common fleet and that
the first priority of use will be moving western Canadian
agriculture products.
Members of the producer coalition have been critical of the
federal government, suggesting it is difficult to develop a business
plan or arrange financing until they know what the selling price of
the cars will be.
I might use the illustration of a used car salesman. If any
member of the House was to buy a used car and went to a used car
lot, they would see a car and would ask the salesman the price of
1492
the car. Our used car salesman, the minister of agriculture, said he
wants to sell his used hopper cars to Canadian farmers but that
there is one little catch, he will not tell them the price of these
hopper cars. He wants the farmers to put together the financing by
going to the Farm Credit Corporation or some leasing company and
make all the arrangements and then he will finally get around to
talking price a ways down the road.
We have heard of some pretty shady used car salesmen in the
past but I certainly do not think farmers appreciate the used hopper
car sales approach that is being used by the minister of agriculture.
In the budget the Liberals laid out a proposal that was far from
specific and raised more questions than it answered: ``The
government will examine proposals for the acquisition of the cars,
taking into account the interests of producers, shippers and
railways and the need to make the most efficient use of the cars.
The Minister of Transport will be authorized to adjust regulated
freight rates effective August 1, 1998 by 75 cents per tonne on
average to cover the cost of the acquisition''.
Shortly after this announcement it was reported that the
government was looking for somewhere in the neighbourhood of
$250 million for the cars. However, this was only a rumour. There
was no substantiation and no firm proposals put forward. There
was no explanation as to how long the 75 cent per tonne surcharge
would remain. There was no explanation as to the replacement
process for replacing these hopper cars. There was no suggestion as
to how they might be maintained. There was no suggestion as to
how they might be allocated.
What the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food and the
Minister of Transport are asking are for farmers to buy these cars.
They will have no locomotives to pull these cars. They have no idea
as to what kind of an allocation process will be put in place for
these cars. Yet they are supposed to put the financing together and
go storming ahead with this process.
It sounds an awful lot like the way the minister of agriculture
handled the whole Crow situation. When the Crow buyout was
announced it was supposed to be offset by efficiencies in rail
transportation. The problem is the minister of agriculture forgot to
address the issue of the efficiencies before he ended the Crow. It
was kind of like putting the cart in front of the horse.
Certainly in this whole Crow fiasco there were a lot of mistakes
made. Certain crops like forage were not included in the payment
even though they were part of the regular rotation of eligible crops.
There were instances where a renter and a land owner were going to
arbitration and it was costing them an exorbitant amount, anywhere
between $500 and $1,500 a day for arbitration for a cheque that
may not be much more than that.
Cheques were to be mailed out in January. However, there are
still constituents in my riding of Kindersley-Lloydminster who
have not received that initial Crow buyout cheque.
I was talking to some people from the Farm Credit Corporation. I
told them this whole Crow buyout plan allowed that the payment
would be going to FCC for land they held and was being leased by a
customer. If the customer chose to use that money as a down
payment they could purchase their land and get it back. I asked how
this plan worked. The corporation said it was really not working at
all because they had to meet a December 31 deadline and many of
them still did not have their initial Crow payment.
(1745 )
They were not able to put together interim financing. They were
not sure what the amount would be. Therefore, he said: ``It is very
rare that you would see a client of the Farm Credit Corporation
using the Crow buyout as a down payment to repurchase his land''.
There was some very bad planning in the whole process.
Let us go back to the grain hopper cars. It makes sense for the
government to develop a clear plan of action rather than taking the
ad hoc approach that we are becoming quickly accustomed to in
this House.
The minister of agriculture has stated publicly a bias in favour of
some form of producer ownership. If the government would like to
see the hopper cars go to the producers, it should develop a
transparent and open framework that will accomplish that. The
minister of agriculture should not be giving the producer coalition
preference when he cannot guarantee the cars will be sold to the
producers.
Second, if the government has already made up its mind who
should own the cars, there is very little point in having a lengthy
consultation process to arrive at a conclusion that perhaps is
predetermined. There has been no openness in discussing the
negotiations or the intentions of the government other than the
minister's expressed wish that the producers somehow buy the
hopper cars without knowing the details.
According to the budget, the bottom line is that the hopper cars
will be sold. They should be sold. While the government should
attempt to get a reasonable amount of money from the sale,
producers that utilize the rail system should not be pained
unnecessarily for paying off the cars. The ending of the WGTA
subsidy has already increased farmers' transportation costs on
average by 75 per cent. What is needed in the car disposition
process is a clear and concise strategy that will prevent the process
from going off the tracks.
The agriculture minister failed in the whole disbanding of the
Crow. He is failing on the hopper cars. He failed on the durum trade
1493
dispute Canada had a year or so ago with the United States and he
failed on the transportation bill, Bill C-14.
The minister of agriculture spoke to a meeting of the
Saskatchewan Wheat Pool in my province and indicated that he
would be a point person, the person who negotiated the best
possible transportation act for prairie producers.
Every prairie representative who I know that came before the
transportation committee said that there were fundamental flaws
with Bill C-14 which needed to be changed. If it would be enacted,
it should be fair both to shippers and the railways. The minister of
agriculture failed to represent that interest, which showed how
hopelessly inadequate he was or how inconsistent he was in
keeping his word.
I want to briefly touch on the reduction of the dairy subsidy and
the creation of a single federal food inspection agency, which are
also parts of the budget.
With regard to the reduction in the dairy subsidy, the Reform
Party has stated that the supply managed sectors must not rely on
federal subsidies to sustain their existence in the marketplace.
Instead, producers must rely on their competitive advantage and
create an environment that is viable, self-reliant and market driven.
The Liberal government has failed to come clean with producers
when it told them that the status quo approach with a few cosmetic
changes would allow the supply managed sectors to go unhindered
into the 21st century. Once again, the government has relied on an
ad hoc approach to the detriment of Canadian farmers.
As far as supply management is concerned, before the election
Liberal candidates and Liberal members of Parliament were
suggesting that article XI was safe, that they would defend article
XI under the GATT. Once they got into power, they quickly broke
that promise as they broke many others. They said, sorry, we did
not have enough support in the international community. We had to
break our word.
I fear that the Liberals are doing the same with supply managed
industries. They are making promises that they are not going to be
able to keep and that is unfair.
One of the promises they broke was the discontinuation of the
dairy subsidy. I heard nothing prior to the last election that a
Liberal government would discontinue the dairy subsidy. In power,
that is what it has turned around and done.
Reform was very open. We had a dialogue with the supply
managed industries. We said that in the overall scope of things we
would reduce and eliminate the dairy subsidy, but we would do it in
co-operation with the industry. The industry would know what was
going on and there would be other avenues that it could follow to
compensate for the losses the farmers would have.
The Liberals were not open and straightforward with the
industry. They mislead the industry and now they are pulling the
rug out from under an industry that was not prepared to deal with
the end of the dairy subsidy. That is not good government and that
is not a good way to deal with the agriculture sector.
As far as the single food inspection agency is concerned, that is a
positive development if it brings about the forecast of expenditure
reductions and if it continues to provide the service that is required.
(1750 )
It is about time the government realized that amalgamating the
same services of three departments under one department will
promote efficiencies financially while reducing the duplication
among various levels of government and government departments.
It is clear that some of the other federal departments should
follow this and reduce inefficiencies. We have to be vigilant to
make sure that the government actually reduces the departments
where there is overlap rather than reshuffle people around, create
this new single inspection agency, but yet keep unnecessary bodies
around in the other three departments because it is not prepared to
make the cuts and do the decisive things that need to be done in the
department of agriculture.
The Liberal delay in addressing the deficit will cost Canadian
taxpayers in excess of $10 billion. If Canadians would have elected
a Reform government in 1993, by the year 2000, taxpayers would
have been $10 billion better off than they are under this Liberal
government because of its mismanagement of the economy and of
the budget.
A Reform government would have halted this waste by
balancing the books more quickly. Furthermore with a balanced
budget taxpayers would see a sustainability of funding for social
programs and tax relief.
That is the compassionate way to deal with seniors. That is the
compassionate and right way to deal with our youth. That is the
right way to deal with the agriculture sector as well.
The sustainability of Canada's social safety net, job creation and
a prosperous farming sector can only be achieved by creating a
healthy economy through a balanced budget, reduced federal
spending and a shrinking federal debt which will result in modest
surpluses and a growing economy. That comes from proper
management and proper budgeting and a finance minister that has
more courage than our current finance minister.
Ms. Albina Guarnieri (Mississauga East, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
simply could not let the member's words about drivel go unnoticed.
I wonder if he would agree with Bill Good, B.C. based radio
call-in host, who said on CTV's ``Sunday Edition'': ``What Paul
1494
Martin has done is gathered a considerable amount of credibility by
hitting the targets that he has said he was going to hit, that is
keeping interest rates relatively low because international investors
now believe Paul Martin is serious about deficit reduction''.
Would he also agree with Jeffrey Simpson, Globe and Mail
columnist who said: ``If only federal governments 10 years ago had
introduced budgets like the last two, including yesterday's-The
fight against deficit-debt has been waged thus far successfully
without major tax increases to which Canadians have become
politically resistant. It has instead been fought where it belongs, in
the government's own spending and in transfer to the provinces''.
Would he agree with the Montreal Gazette editorial: ``For the
most part Mr. Martin deserves praise for keeping his government's
promise to keep federal finances under control without damaging
the core of the country's social services and without hurting too
many people too badly''.
Perhaps he would agree with Jason Moscovitz that the reason for
the drivel of the member's opposite is that, as Mr. Moscovitz said:
``With the Liberals showing the deficit declining, the Reform Party
appears to have been caught flat footed. Paul Martin had a day he
may not soon forget. In straight parliamentary terms he beat up the
opposition-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I hesitate to interrupt at any
time but I think it is important to remember that although
sometimes we might quote from any publication, the rule of the
House is that we cannot do indirectly what we cannot do directly. In
other words, directly we would not name the Minister of Finance.
We would refer to him as the Minister of Finance.
I know we have been away for a few weeks and we are a little
rusty. I just bring that to the attention of the House once again. I
think the question has now been put.
Mr. Hermanson: Mr. Speaker, it was interesting. What the
member was doing was quoting from the Liberal finance
department's briefing notes. This is what the hon. member should
say in response to Reformers. Use this quote, this quote and this
quote, and see what happens.
I am not sure of the economic credentials of some of the people
who wrote some of those articles. I am sure they are all excellent
journalists in one form or the other. A lot of what the member said
is true. The finance minister has hit his target.
Actually, Mr. Speaker, if you put a string a foot above the foyer I
could jump over it without any problem. If you put the target up
where it should be, where I would be competitive, in my case it still
would not be too high because of the shape I am in. Let us say three
or four feet and then it would be a challenge.
(1755)
The finance minister has set his sights very low. He is certainly
hitting his targets but he is doing it at great cost to future
generations. Low income seniors will not have their old age
pensions and CPP because of the finance minister's low targets.
Young people today, our kids and our grand kids will be paying
taxes that they cannot afford to pay and they will be looking for
jobs that are not available because the finance minister set his
targets far too low.
Mr. Simpson said that this should have been done sooner. It
certainly should have been done a whole lot sooner. The debt was
$17 billion in our centennial year. Now the deficit is $30 or $40
billion a year.
One of the worst finance ministers during that period is the
current Prime Minister. He started us down the wrong road. The
Mulroney government came along and it could not fix it either.
Canadians finally started getting mad and now they are electing
Reformers because they realize they were headed on a course to
disaster if we do not get the federal ledger balanced and get it done
soon.
As far as Mr. Moscovitz is concerned he is a great reporter. I
enjoy watching his show. He is always entertaining but he reminds
me in that statement of a lot of reporters who said in 1988 that the
Reform will never elect an MP. These are the people who said that.
``They will never elect an MP. You will never see one of them
sitting in the House of Commons''. In 1989 we elected our first MP.
They said that Reform would never get anywhere outside of
western Canada and it will never be anything more than just a rump
in the west. We hold the majority of seats in western Canada and
we elected a member in Ontario. We were the second strongest
party in Ontario.
The other day we almost won a seat in Newfoundland where the
experts had written us off and said we would never even get a
toehold.
Mr. Moscovitz may be wrong. We see the Liberals breaking their
promises, taking away OAS, not being able to fund CPP, not being
able to support post-secondary education. Then Canadians will say
the Liberals betrayed us, the Reformers were right and that is where
we had better put our stocks in the future.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Before I resume debate,
earlier an hon. member raised the issue of a wager. The last
member who spoke made mention of how high he might be able to
jump. That might make for an interesting wager.
Let me see if I can get some clarification here. Is the hon.
member for Elk Island seeking the floor for debate?
Mr. Epp: Yes.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Let me clear the matter up as
best I can. The last spokesperson from the Reform Party, the hon.
1495
member for Kindersley-Lloydminster, went well beyond 10
minutes if there was split of the debate time. I am having great
difficulty in recognizing someone from the same party at this time.
I hope that the hon. member will understand. I might have been
of more assistance if I had asked the member if he was sharing his
time. I failed to do so. I regret the confusion.
Mr. Epp: Mr. Speaker, a point of order. I was of the opinion that
we were splitting our time, however I will gladly defer if you can
assure me that some time down the road I may get another
opportunity.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I am sure the hon. member
will get another opportunity. The matter of debate today is the
amendment of the official opposition. It will be voted on no later
than after the bells at 6.15 p.m. I believe there is still some debate
time left on the budget motion. Could the table officers indicate to
me that there is still some time? There is still some debate time on
the budget, and so the hon. member for Elk Island will have an
opportunity.
(1800)
Mr. Hermanson: Mr. Speaker, on a point of order, I am sorry if I
went over my 10 minutes. I was of the understanding that we had
indicated we were dividing our time. Could you indicate whether
there is still part of the half-hour slot remaining? Would the
member for Elk Island at least be able to use some of that time if
there is some time remaining?
I apologize if I went longer. I was expecting a sign from you
when nearing the 10 minute mark.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Normally in all likelihood I
would have given any member some indication when getting close
to his or her time. However, not having the previous information
that the member was to be splitting his time, once we got beyond
the 10 minutes I accepted the fact that possibly the hon. member
for Kindersley-Lloydminster was to take the full 20 minute slot.
Again, I apologize if I contributed to this confusion but I must
look to the opposite parties now for debate.
Mr. Hermanson: Mr. Speaker, I apologize for using more time.
It is probably my fault and I accept responsibility.
Would the House consider granting unanimous consent in the
short time we have before the bells ring to give the hon. member
for Elk Island about 10 minutes to give his speech. If the House
denies I understand, since it is my fault, but if the House would be
generous I ask for unanimous consent.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Could the hon. member for
Elk Island possibly summarize in five minutes?
Mr. Epp: Mr. Speaker, I will gladly do that given the
opportunity.
[Translation]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): So, here we are. We all
realize that there was some confusion. The hon. member for
Kindersley-Lloydminster thought he would speak for ten minutes
and split his time with the hon. member for Elk Island. However, he
went on for nearly 15 minutes.
With the consent of the House, I will give five minutes to the
member for Elk Island and I will then give the floor to the hon.
member for Chicoutimi for his allotted ten minutes. Then the bells
will ring for the vote. Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
[English]
Mr. Ken Epp (Elk Island, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I will focus my
comments on the urgency of balancing the budget. This is the thing
most Liberals are missing. The talk is always that they are on
target. While they are meeting their soft targets, for which they
should be commended, at the same time we are losing the battle.
As a high school student I ran a marathon race. Each of us in that
high school competition had to set our own goals. Each person
practised and did his training in order to achieve his goal. I set the
goal to finish the race. That was my only goal. I have never been
athletic. I have always been heavy for my size. It is not all muscle.
I set my goal to finish the race, and I did finish it. When I
finished the run there was only one person left there, the high
school official who checked me off as having met my goal. All the
others had already gone home, but I finished.
Notice I do not have any credentials or accolades as an Olympic
racer. I met my own goal, which is great, but I did not compete at
all outside of that. This is what the Minister of Finance is doing. He
is setting goals he can reach, which makes him feel good. There
may be one person at the finish line, not many more, who will give
him a check mark and say ``you done good''. However, he will not
be an Olympic winner at the rate he is going.
The essence of the speed or the importance of the speed is what
is happening in the growth of our debt. I did a few little
calculations. In 1993 to pay off our debt we would have needed a
surplus of some $47 billion a year for 25 years. Regrettably we now
need an annual surplus of approximately $56 billion per year. We
need a surplus that large if we are to pay off our debt.
(1805)
Every year we postpone balancing the budget and bringing the
deficit to zero, that number increases. That, hon. members, is the
reason for the urgency. I really feel we are letting down our
1496
children and our grandchildren by allowing the debt to grow
indefinitely without solving the problem.
I recognize that my short time has ended. I appreciate the
opportunity to speak to the issue.
[Translation]
Mr. Gilbert Fillion (Chicoutimi, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I am
pleased to discuss the budget recently tabled by the Minister of
Finance.
I feel quite comfortable doing so, because I since had the
opportunity to consult my constituents and to hear their comments,
which I will convey to this House.
First, taxpayers and residents in my riding of Chicoutimi feel
that the Minister of Finance totally missed the boat. They simply
ask the government to get its revenues-since the revenue minister
is here-where the money really is, starting with family trusts.
They also want the government to review the whole corporate
tax system and to abolish tax shelters.
The Minister of Finance is ignoring these calls from ordinary
citizens. With the support of all government members, he continues
to take what little is left in the pockets of the poor, the unemployed
and students.
By contrast, no measure is proposed to recover the $6.6 billion
owed to Revenue Canada. Nor is there any plan to review the whole
tax system. In this budget, we note that, in terms of income tax,
more than $5 billion will be collected from individual taxpayers
this year, as compared to a mere $700 million from corporations.
Several of my colleagues have mentioned the fact that, as part of
its deficit reduction effort, the government was helping itself to
money that workers and employers have contributed to the UI fund,
thereby creating an artificial deficit reduction. This astronomical
amount could have been put to other uses, such as creating
employment.
By his actions, the Minister of Finance is disguising his deficit.
He even went so far as to say that he would continue to dip into the
UI fund in coming years. It is a disgrace.
Incidentally, business people, workers and unemployed people
will be holding a protest march in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, on
May 4, with the support of the Conférence des chambres de
commerce du Saguenay, to show the Minister of Finance that they
disagree with his action and also to let the Minister of Human
Resources Development know that they disagree with his reform. I
can assure you that no activist will be taking part in this
demonstration.
The fact is that the Minister of Finance is completely blind to the
reality, and he is pulling his government along in his wake.
(1810)
This budget also contains some measures which endanger
another sector of activity that is very important in my area, in
Quebec. The announced cuts to the dairy industry place it in
jeopardy. Quebec's agrifood industry will be facing cuts of some
32.3 per cent.
For some years now, we in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean have seen
the number of dairy farms decrease. Federal government funding,
estimated at some $8,000 per farm, allowed milk producers to keep
production costs low. You can see right away what will happen.
You can guess what the results of this cut will be: increased cost to
the consumer. Production will likely be lower because of that.
According to a number of people in the region, quotas could
leave the region because dairy farmers will not be able to support
their operations on their own. Once again, more unemployment in a
region that has long been number one in the country for
unemployment, a dubious honour we could readily do without.
Yet, when the Liberal government announced abolition of the
Crow benefit, it automatically included a $3 billion compensation
for western farmers. Here, the subsidy to the dairy industry is being
abolished, but where are such measures this time? Nothing has
been planned. A fine country, is it not, with equality for all? The
true face of those people across the floor is a two-faced, double
standard.
Comparisons are unavoidable. Thus the Liberals have always
had two speeches: one for Quebec and one for the rest of Canada.
Things are different from one place to the other. Things are watered
down. There is, for example, no more mention of distinct society
status for Quebec. Now they are talking simply of a cultural
homeland in North America, a homeland where the Americans may
perhaps have something to say. Why not state right now, clearly,
that Quebecers are a people, yes, a people?
Now, I would like to go back to taxation. The minister did
promise a review of taxation. But no. What better thing did he
come up with? He came up with the clever idea of setting up a
committee with people coming from very important companies
that have the pleasure of using tax havens. It is ludicrous. However,
until this committee makes its report, money is flowing out of the
country causing unemployment to rise.
This budget, which we in the Bloc described rightly as a
mediocre make-up session, hides the truth about Canadian
finances. It makes promises whose fate is the same as those the
famous red book made. When will jobs be created? When will the
GST be abolished? When will real steps be taken to improve the
economy? Nothing. Not even a glimmer of hope.
However, people were hoping for something better. Everything
is falling on their heads at the moment. They were especially
hoping for jobs. So the famous promise of jobs is a smoke screen.
The Minister of Finance has announced he would double summer
jobs for students. He is simply putting back what was there before.
1497
Last year, in my riding, half of this funding was cut. This year, it is
being doubled, so we are back where we started from. This has
happened all over Quebec. Once again, it is window dressing.
We have come to the point where the government has lost all
credibility. It is unable to revive the economy, to keep its promises,
or to create jobs. Furthermore, the government is about to pass a
law that would deprive thousands of unemployed workers of UI
benefits. This reform is an admission of failure by the government.
The budget tabled by the Minister of Finance is not a responsible
budget. It simply implements what the minister announced earlier
and tells us what to expect in the future. For example, if you are 60
years old today, will you remember in five years that you may no
longer qualify for the old age pension? Again, this is nothing but a
smoke screen. The Minister of Finance must go back to the
drawing board so that he can finally meet the people's
expectations.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): In closing, I would like to
thank all hon. members of this House for their co-operation.
It being 6.15 p.m., it is my duty to interrupt the proceedings and
put forthwith all questions necessary to dispose of the amendment
now before the House.
The question is on the amendment. Is it the pleasure of the House
to adopt the amendment?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Deputy Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those in favour of the
amendment will please say yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those opposed will
please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): In my opinion the nays have
it.
And more than five members having risen:
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Call in the members.
(The House divided on the amendment, which was negatived on
the following division:)
(Division No. 32)
YEAS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Althouse
Asselin
Bachand
Bélisle
Benoit
Bergeron
Bernier (Gaspé)
Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville)
Brien
Crête
Dalphond-Guiral
de Savoye
Debien
Deshaies
Dubé
Duceppe
Epp
Fillion
Forseth
Frazer
Gagnon (Québec)
Gauthier
Gilmour
Godin
Grey (Beaver River)
Grubel
Guimond
Hanger
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Hayes
Hermanson
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Jacob
Jennings
Johnston
Lalonde
Landry
Langlois
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Lebel
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Loubier
Manning
Marchand
Mayfield
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
McLaughlin
Mercier
Meredith
Mills (Red Deer)
Morrison
Nunez
Picard (Drummond)
Pomerleau
Ramsay
Ringma
Robinson
Rocheleau
Sauvageau
Schmidt
Silye
Solberg
Solomon
Taylor
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Tremblay (Rosemont)
Venne
Williams-72
NAYS
Members
Alcock
Allmand
Anderson
Arseneault
Assad
Assadourian
Augustine
Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre/Sud-Centre)
Bakopanos
Barnes
Bélair
Bélanger
Bertrand
Bethel
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Brown (Oakville-Milton)
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chrétien (Saint-Maurice)
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Copps
Cowling
Culbert
Cullen
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dingwall
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Duhamel
Easter
English
Fewchuk
Flis
Fontana
Gagliano
Gallaway
Graham
Grose
Guarnieri
Harper (Churchill)
Harvard
Hickey
Hopkins
Hubbard
Irwin
Jackson
Jordan
Karygiannis
Keyes
Kirkby
Kraft Sloan
Lastewka
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Loney
MacAulay
MacLellan (Cape/Cap-Breton-The Sydneys)
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Marchi
Marleau
Massé
McCormick
McGuire
McKinnon
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Mifflin
Minna
Mitchell
Murphy
Murray
Nault
O'Brien (Labrador)
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Patry
Peterson
1498
Pettigrew
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Proud
Reed
Regan
Robichaud
Rock
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Serré
Shepherd
Speller
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Telegdi
Thalheimer
Torsney
Ur
Valeri
Vanclief
Verran
Wappel
Wells
Whelan
Wood
Young
Zed-123
PAIRED MEMBERS
Adams
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead)
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Crawford
Daviault
Dumas
Dupuy
Gaffney
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gerrard
Godfrey
Guay
Knutson
Laurin
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Shefford)
Ménard
Paradis
Paré
Peters
Richardson
Sheridan
St. Denis
(1840)
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare the amendment
lost.
_____________________________________________
1498
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
English]
The House resumed from March 28 consideration of Bill C-19,
an act to implement the agreement on internal trade as reported
(with amendments) from the committee.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): The House will now proceed
to the taking of the deferred divisions at the report stage of Bill
C-19, an act to implement the agreement on internal trade.
The question is on Motion No. 1.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, if you were to seek it I believe you
would find unanimous consent to apply the vote taken on the
previous motion to the motion now before the House as well as to
report stage Motion No. 2.
[Translation]
Mrs. Dalphond-Guiral: Agreed.
[English]
Mr. Ringma: Agreed.
Mr. Solomon: Agreed.
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 32.]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motions Nos. 1 and
2 negatived.
(Motions Nos. 1 and 2 negatived.)
[Translation]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): The next question is on
Motion No. 3.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, if you were to seek it, I believe you
would find unanimous consent to apply the vote taken on the
previous motion to the motion now before the House.
Consequently, Liberal members will be recorded as having voted
no on the motion now before the House.
(1845)
Mrs. Dalphond-Guiral: Members of the official opposition will
vote yes.
[English]
Mr. Ringma: Mr. Speaker, Reform Party members will vote no
on these except for those who might wish to vote otherwise.
Mr. Solomon: Mr. Speaker, New Democrats in the House vote
no on these motions.
(The House divided on Motion No. 3, which was negatived on
the following division:)
(Division No. 33)
YEAS
Members
Asselin
Bachand
Bélisle
Bergeron
Bernier (Gaspé)
Brien
Crête
Dalphond-Guiral
de Savoye
Debien
Deshaies
Dubé
Duceppe
Fillion
Gagnon (Québec)
Gauthier
Godin
Guimond
Jacob
Lalonde
Landry
Langlois
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Lebel
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Loubier
Marchand
Mercier
Nunez
Picard (Drummond)
Pomerleau
Rocheleau
Sauvageau
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Tremblay (Rosemont)
Venne-37
NAYS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Alcock
Allmand
Althouse
Anderson
Arseneault
Assad
Assadourian
Augustine
Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre/Sud-Centre)
Bakopanos
Barnes
Bélair
1499
Bélanger
Benoit
Bertrand
Bethel
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville)
Brown (Oakville-Milton)
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chrétien (Saint-Maurice)
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Copps
Cowling
Culbert
Cullen
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dingwall
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Duhamel
Easter
English
Epp
Fewchuk
Flis
Fontana
Forseth
Frazer
Gagliano
Gallaway
Gilmour
Graham
Grey (Beaver River)
Grose
Grubel
Guarnieri
Hanger
Harper (Churchill)
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Harvard
Hayes
Hermanson
Hickey
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Hopkins
Hubbard
Irwin
Jackson
Jennings
Johnston
Jordan
Karygiannis
Keyes
Kirkby
Kraft Sloan
Lastewka
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Loney
MacAulay
MacLellan (Cape/Cap-Breton-The Sydneys)
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Manning
Marchi
Marleau
Massé
Mayfield
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
McCormick
McGuire
McKinnon
McLaughlin
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Meredith
Mifflin
Mills (Red Deer)
Minna
Mitchell
Morrison
Murphy
Murray
Nault
O'Brien (Labrador)
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Patry
Peterson
Pettigrew
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Proud
Ramsay
Reed
Regan
Ringma
Robichaud
Robinson
Rock
Schmidt
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Serré
Shepherd
Silye
Solberg
Solomon
Speller
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Taylor
Telegdi
Thalheimer
Torsney
Ur
Valeri
Vanclief
Verran
Wappel
Wells
Whelan
Williams
Wood
Young
Zed-158
PAIRED MEMBERS
Adams
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead)
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Crawford
Daviault
Dumas
Dupuy
Gaffney
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gerrard
Godfrey
Guay
Knutson
Laurin
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Shefford)
Ménard
Paradis
Paré
Peters
Richardson
Sheridan
St. Denis
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motion No. 3
defeated.
Hon. John Manley (Minister of Industry, Minister for the
Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, Minister of Western
Economic Diversification and Minister responsible for the
Federal Office of Regional Development-Quebec, Lib.) moved
that the bill, as amended, be concurred in.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is it the pleasure of the
House to adopt the motion?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those in favour of the
motion will please say yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those opposed will
please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): In my opinion the yeas have
it.
Some hon. members: On division.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare the motion carried
on division.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): The House will now proceed
to the taking of the deferred divisions at the report stage of Bill
C-15.
* * *
The House resumed from March 28 consideration of Bill C-15,
an act to amend, enact and repeal certain laws relating to financial
institutions, as reported (with amendments) from the committee.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): The question is on Motion
No. 1. A vote on this motions also applies to Motions Nos. 2, 3, 5,
6, 7 and 10.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I believe you would find unanimous
consent to apply in reverse the vote taken on report stage Motion
No. 3 of Bill C-19.
I also believe you would find unanimous consent to apply that
same vote to report stage Motions Nos. 4 and 9.
1500
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
(The House divided on Motion No. 1, which was agreed to on the
following division:)
(Division No. 34)
YEAS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Alcock
Allmand
Althouse
Anderson
Arseneault
Assad
Assadourian
Augustine
Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre/Sud-Centre)
Bakopanos
Barnes
Bélair
Bélanger
Benoit
Bertrand
Bethel
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville)
Brown (Oakville-Milton)
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chrétien (Saint-Maurice)
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Copps
Cowling
Culbert
Cullen
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dingwall
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Duhamel
Easter
English
Epp
Fewchuk
Flis
Fontana
Forseth
Frazer
Gagliano
Gallaway
Gilmour
Graham
Grey (Beaver River)
Grose
Grubel
Guarnieri
Hanger
Harper (Churchill)
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Harvard
Hayes
Hermanson
Hickey
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Hopkins
Hubbard
Irwin
Jackson
Jennings
Johnston
Jordan
Karygiannis
Keyes
Kirkby
Kraft Sloan
Lastewka
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Loney
MacAulay
MacLellan (Cape/Cap-Breton-The Sydneys)
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Manning
Marchi
Marleau
Massé
Mayfield
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
McCormick
McGuire
McKinnon
McLaughlin
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Meredith
Mifflin
Mills (Red Deer)
Minna
Mitchell
Morrison
Murphy
Murray
Nault
O'Brien (Labrador)
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Patry
Peterson
Pettigrew
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Proud
Ramsay
Reed
Regan
Ringma
Robichaud
Robinson
Rock
Schmidt
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Serré
Shepherd
Silye
Solberg
Solomon
Speller
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Taylor
Telegdi
Thalheimer
Torsney
Ur
Valeri
Vanclief
Verran
Wappel
Wells
Whelan
Williams
Wood
Young
Zed-158
NAYS
Members
Asselin
Bachand
Bélisle
Bergeron
Bernier (Gaspé)
Brien
Crête
Dalphond-Guiral
de Savoye
Debien
Deshaies
Dubé
Duceppe
Fillion
Gagnon (Québec)
Gauthier
Godin
Guimond
Jacob
Lalonde
Landry
Langlois
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Lebel
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Loubier
Marchand
Mercier
Nunez
Picard (Drummond)
Pomerleau
Rocheleau
Sauvageau
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Tremblay (Rosemont)
Venne-37
PAIRED MEMBERS
Adams
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead)
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Crawford
Daviault
Dumas
Dupuy
Gaffney
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gerrard
Godfrey
Guay
Knutson
Laurin
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Shefford)
Ménard
Paradis
Paré
Peters
Richardson
Sheridan
St. Denis
(The House divided on Motion No. 9, which was agreed to on the
following division:)
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 34]
(The House divided on Motion No. 4, which was agreed to on the
following division:)
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 34]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motions Nos. 1, 4
and 9 carried. Therefore I declare Motions Nos. 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 10
carried.
The next question is on Motion No. 11.
1501
[Translation]
The vote on this motion also applies to Motion No. 13.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, if you were to seek it, I believe you
would find unanimous consent to apply in reverse the vote taken on
the previous motion and to do the same regarding report stage
Motion No. 12.
[English]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
[Translation]
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 33]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motions Nos. 11
and 12 defeated. I declare Motion No. 13 defeated.
[English]
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.) moved that the
bill, as amended, be concurred in.
(1850 )
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is it the pleasure of the
House to adopt the motion?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those in favour of the
motion will please say yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those opposed to the
motion will please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): In my opinion the yeas have
it.
And more than five members having risen:
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, if you were to seek it I believe you
would find unanimous consent to apply the vote taken on ways and
means Motion No. 1 in reverse to the motion presently before the
House.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is it agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
(The House divided on the motion which was agreed to on the
following division:)
(Division No. 35)
YEAS
Members
Alcock
Allmand
Anderson
Arseneault
Assad
Assadourian
Augustine
Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre/Sud-Centre)
Bakopanos
Barnes
Bélair
Bélanger
Bertrand
Bethel
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Brown (Oakville-Milton)
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chrétien (Saint-Maurice)
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Copps
Cowling
Culbert
Cullen
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dingwall
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Duhamel
Easter
English
Fewchuk
Flis
Fontana
Gagliano
Gallaway
Graham
Grose
Guarnieri
Harper (Churchill)
Harvard
Hickey
Hopkins
Hubbard
Irwin
Jackson
Jordan
Karygiannis
Keyes
Kirkby
Kraft Sloan
Lastewka
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Loney
MacAulay
MacLellan (Cape/Cap-Breton-The Sydneys)
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Marchi
Marleau
Massé
McCormick
McGuire
McKinnon
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Mifflin
Minna
Mitchell
Murphy
Murray
Nault
O'Brien (Labrador)
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Patry
Peterson
Pettigrew
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Proud
Reed
Regan
Robichaud
Rock
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Serré
Shepherd
Speller
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Telegdi
Thalheimer
Torsney
Ur
Valeri
Vanclief
Verran
Wappel
Wells
Whelan
Wood
Young
Zed-123
NAYS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Althouse
Asselin
Bachand
Bélisle
Benoit
Bergeron
Bernier (Gaspé)
Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville)
Brien
Crête
Dalphond-Guiral
de Savoye
Debien
Deshaies
Dubé
Duceppe
Epp
Fillion
Forseth
Frazer
Gagnon (Québec)
Gauthier
Gilmour
Godin
Grey (Beaver River)
Grubel
Guimond
Hanger
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Hayes
Hermanson
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Jacob
Jennings
Johnston
Lalonde
Landry
1502
Langlois
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Lebel
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Loubier
Manning
Marchand
Mayfield
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
McLaughlin
Mercier
Meredith
Mills (Red Deer)
Morrison
Nunez
Picard (Drummond)
Pomerleau
Ramsay
Ringma
Robinson
Rocheleau
Sauvageau
Schmidt
Silye
Solberg
Solomon
Taylor
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Tremblay (Rosemont)
Venne
Williams-72
PAIRED MEMBERS
Adams
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead)
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Crawford
Daviault
Dumas
Dupuy
Gaffney
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gerrard
Godfrey
Guay
Knutson
Laurin
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Shefford)
Ménard
Paradis
Paré
Peters
Richardson
Sheridan
St. Denis
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare the motion carried.
The House will now proceed to the taking of the deferred
recorded division at the report stage of Bill C-11, an act to establish
the Department of Human Resources Development and to amend
and repeal certain related acts.
* * *
The House resumed from March 28, consideration of Bill C-11,
an act to establish the Department of Human Resources
Development and to amend and repeal certain related acts as
reported (with amendment) from the committee.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): The question is on Motion
No. 1. A vote on this motion also applies to Motions Nos. 2, 4and 6.
[Translation]
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I think you would find unanimous
consent that all members who voted on the previous motion be
recorded as having voted on the motion now before the House, with
Liberal members voting nay.
Mrs. Dalphond-Guiral: Mr. Speaker, members of the official
opposition will vote nay.
[English]
Mr. Ringma: Mr. Speaker, Reform Party members will vote yes
on this motion except for those who wish to vote otherwise.
Mr. Solomon: Mr. Speaker, the New Democrat members in the
House will vote no on this matter.
(The House divided on the motion which was negatived on the
following division:)
(Division No. 36)
YEAS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Benoit
Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville)
Epp
Forseth
Frazer
Gilmour
Grey (Beaver River)
Grubel
Hanger
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Hayes
Hermanson
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Jennings
Johnston
Manning
Mayfield
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
Meredith
Mills (Red Deer)
Morrison
Ramsay
Ringma
Schmidt
Silye
Solberg
Williams-30
NAYS
Members
Alcock
Allmand
Althouse
Anderson
Arseneault
Assad
Assadourian
Asselin
Augustine
Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre/Sud-Centre)
Bachand
Bakopanos
Barnes
Bélair
Bélanger
Bélisle
Bergeron
Bernier (Gaspé)
Bertrand
Bethel
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Brien
Brown (Oakville-Milton)
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chrétien (Saint-Maurice)
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Copps
Cowling
Crête
Culbert
Cullen
Dalphond-Guiral
de Savoye
Debien
Deshaies
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dingwall
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Dubé
Duceppe
Duhamel
Easter
English
Fewchuk
Fillion
Flis
Fontana
Gagliano
Gagnon (Québec)
Gallaway
Gauthier
Godin
Graham
Grose
Guarnieri
Guimond
Harper (Churchill)
Harvard
Hickey
Hopkins
Hubbard
Irwin
Jackson
Jacob
Jordan
Karygiannis
Keyes
1503
Kirkby
Kraft Sloan
Lalonde
Landry
Langlois
Lastewka
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Lebel
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Loney
Loubier
MacAulay
MacLellan (Cape/Cap-Breton-The Sydneys)
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Marchand
Marchi
Marleau
Massé
McCormick
McGuire
McKinnon
McLaughlin
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Mercier
Mifflin
Minna
Mitchell
Murphy
Murray
Nault
Nunez
O'Brien (Labrador)
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Patry
Peterson
Pettigrew
Picard (Drummond)
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Pomerleau
Proud
Reed
Regan
Robichaud
Robinson
Rocheleau
Rock
Sauvageau
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Serré
Shepherd
Solomon
Speller
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Taylor
Telegdi
Thalheimer
Torsney
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Tremblay (Rosemont)
Ur
Valeri
Vanclief
Venne
Verran
Wappel
Wells
Whelan
Wood
Young
Zed-165
PAIRED MEMBERS
Adams
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead)
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Crawford
Daviault
Dumas
Dupuy
Gaffney
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gerrard
Godfrey
Guay
Knutson
Laurin
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Shefford)
Ménard
Paradis
Paré
Peters
Richardson
Sheridan
St. Denis
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motion No. 1
defeated. I therefore declare Motions Nos. 2, 4 and 6 defeated.
The next question is on Motion No. 3.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I believe you will find unanimous
consent to apply the vote taken on the previous motion to the
motion now before the House.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is it agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 36.]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motion No. 3
negatived.
(Motion No. 3 negatived.)
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): The next question is on
Motion No. 5.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I believe you would find unanimous
consent that the results of the ways and means Motion No. 1 be
applied to the vote now before the House.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is it agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 32.]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare Motion No. 5
negatived.
(Motion No. 5 negatived.)
[Translation]
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.) moved that the bill be concurred in at report
stage (with further amendments).
Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the motion?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those in favour will
please say yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): All those opposed will
please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): In my opinion the yeas have
it.
And more than five members having risen:
[English]
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I believe you would find unanimous
consent to apply in reverse the vote taken on the previous motion to
the motion now before the House.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): Is it agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
1504
[Translation]
[Editor's Note: See list under Division No. 35.]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I declare the motion carried.
(Motion agreed to.)
[English]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): It being 6.55 p.m., this
House stands adjourned until tomorrow at 10 a.m. pursuant to
Standing Order 24(1).
(The House adjourned at 6.55 p.m.)