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Business of Supply  Ironically, cap and trade was developed more to tax businesses and the real polluters, versus what we are now stuck with. What does my colleague think about Doug Ford's putting us in the situation where it cost us billions of dollars to get out of cap and trade, and now putting us in the current situation?

May 30th, 2024House debate

Brian MasseNDP

Climate Change  That is not taking into account the COVID-19 period. This shows that what we are doing to fight emissions and put a cap on emissions here in Canada is working.

May 31st, 2024House debate

Julie DabrusinLiberal

Electoral Participation Act  After nine long years of the Liberal government, we can ill afford another selfish Liberal policy that would further bankrupt future generations. Conservatives will bring down inflation, allowing interest rates to fall by capping federal government spending with a dollar-for-dollar rule, and we will ensure that Canadians are not on the hook for tens of millions of dollars in pensions from moving the election date for spurious or disingenuous purposes.

May 31st, 2024House debate

Dave EppConservative

Business of Supply  In my home province of Quebec, it would be even more than that, because there is not a price on pollution; there is a cap-and-trade program. I think of the Canadian families who are struggling with the cost of living. In the budget, we presented to Parliament measures to help Canadians when it comes to the cost of living.

May 30th, 2024House debate

Sherry RomanadoLiberal

Business of Supply  For example, my home province of Ontario, and it was just mentioned by one of my NDP colleagues here, did have a carbon-pricing mechanism before the current provincial government was elected in 2016. It was a cap-and-trade system with Quebec and California. When the provincial Conservative government in Ontario got into office, it cancelled that system and, unfortunately, not only was there a cost to cancelling it, but the province actually lost, and I remember this very clearly, $3 billion in annual revenue.

May 30th, 2024House debate

Julie DzerowiczLiberal

Business of Supply  The answer is simple, “The big difference between the cost of living in town and in the regions is the need for a car. If you have a family, you have two cars.” A father of four in Cap-d'Espoir said, “They need gas and gas is more expensive than it is in Montreal. It all adds up, so yes, there are things that cost more.” Like the Liberals, the Bloc wants people in the regions to pay more for getting around.

May 30th, 2024House debate

Luc BertholdConservative

Business of Supply  Conservatives would axe other taxes and clawbacks, too, so workers could keep more of their hard-earned money. They could spend it, instead of having the government spend it for them. We would cap the inflationary, out-of-control borrowing and spending here in Ottawa so that grocery bills and mortgage payments could finally be within reach and so that somebody without rich parents or a trust fund could take a summer vacation.

May 30th, 2024House debate

Melissa LantsmanConservative

Business of Supply  It is no wonder that people are questioning the Liberal government and its commitment to climate action when it waters down its policies on the emissions cap, fails to implement bold climate policies and buys a pipeline.

May 30th, 2024House debate

Laurel CollinsNDP

Business of Supply  The Liberals have turned the carbon tax into this silver bullet of climate policy, while they refuse to implement a strong, robust emissions cap, to transform our economy with a green industrial strategy, to centre indigenous voices on climate action and to adequately fund watershed security in my home province of B.C. If we invest in climate resilience and climate adaptation, in supporting our communities, our farmers and indigenous communities to adapt to the coming changes, we will save billions of dollars and we will save lives.

May 30th, 2024House debate

Laurel CollinsNDP

Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Atlantic Accord Implementation Act  No one believes the Liberals have any intention of helping resource-developing provinces. Whether it is Bill C-50, which is going to have the emission cap and punish Newfoundland as well, Bill C-69, the no-new-pipeline bill, or banning ships off the B.C. coast, the Liberals have zero believability when they say they are there for resource-producing provinces.

May 28th, 2024House debate

Kelly McCauleyConservative

Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Atlantic Accord Implementation Act  My hope is that with legislation like this, with the support of premiers and with the support of people in provinces across Canada, we will see the changes necessary to have renewable energy, to see our greenhouse gas emissions reduced, to see caps finally placed on big oil and gas, and to see a future that my children and all of our children can be proud of, moving forward.

May 27th, 2024House debate

Lisa Marie BarronNDP

Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Atlantic Accord Implementation Act  CO2 emissions have only recently flatlined after many years of rising under the government's tenure, and we still do not have an emissions cap on the oil and gas industry, as promised by the Prime Minister two years ago at COP26. We are in a climate crisis and we need to see actions being taken at a much faster rate than this.

May 27th, 2024House debate

Lisa Marie BarronNDP

The Economy  We know that his massive government deficits have driven rates up two percentage points higher than they otherwise would be, according to Scotiabank. Will he accept my common-sense, dollar-for-dollar plan to cap spending and cut waste to bring down interest rates so Canadians can keep their homes?

May 27th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Finance  Against this backdrop, the Bloc Québécois is voting in favour of a $500-billion bureaucratic, inflationary and centralist budget that is causing interest rates to balloon. Why does the Prime Minister not cap spending and reduce the waste in order to lower interest rates?

May 27th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

The Economy  The NDP-Liberal government hiked the carbon tax 23% last month, driving up the cost for food, gas and heating, especially hard-hitting in rural Canada. Only common sense Conservatives will cap spending, axe the carbon tax, and bring home safe streets and powerful paychecks for Canadians.

May 27th, 2024House debate

Rob MorrisonConservative