Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Again, Bill C-18 seems to increase the arbitrary power of the minister as one of its main objectives and purposes, and we're seeking to retain at least the power of the farmers and producers to control their own destiny with the marketing vehicle they choose to participate in, even in the dual-system voluntary regime that's being put into effect.
Proposed subsection 42(1) says, “In exercising its powers and performing its duties, the Corporation must give effect to the provisions of the Agreement that pertain to the Corporation...”, with the “Agreement” being the North American Free Trade Agreement.
In the interests of our own economic sovereignty and the dignity and the democratic rights of farm producers, we're suggesting the language be changed to say that “the Corporation may, if so directed by a plebiscite of its producers, give effect to the provisions of the Agreement that pertain to that Corporation”.
I think this particular amendment has never been more timely or pertinent given the American attitude, our NAFTA partner's attitude, with their Buy American policy and what we anticipate is going to be a slamming shut of the border. You just wait until some of this Canadian grain starts flowing into the United States to see how well that's going to be greeted by senators of the American states bordering Canada, as grain truck after grain truck goes down to these milling facilities. There will be serious countervailing measures, we predict.
They've hated the Canadian Wheat Board already for generations. They considered it an unfair competitive advantage, but that's the operative word: they acknowledge that it has been an “advantage”, so much so that 13 times they've gone to the GATT and the WTO and filed complaints against the Wheat Board.
Now that they contemplate the language in Bill C-18, which suggests that the corporation “must give effect to the provisions of the Agreement that pertain to the Corporation”, the real impetus for Bill C-18 is revealed: to hand over the competitive trade advantage of the Canadian Wheat Board to the American agrifood industry without even getting anything in trade.
It's the largest single trade concession in recent history, in living memory, and, without even getting anything back, we're giving up our trade advantage. At the very least, we should get up off our knees, stand on our hind legs, and declare that if the farmer producers agree with these provisions, then they “may” give effect to those provisions--not that they “must” or “shall”.
I've negotiated about a hundred collective agreements and I know the difference between “may” and “shall”. We want language that favours, to the best extent possible ,the rights and the economic sovereignty of Canadians, not something that unilaterally forfeits our economic sovereignty and the trade advantage that we enjoy--or have enjoyed until this sorry night with the Canadian Wheat Board.
It reminds me of the softwood lumber agreement. I used that analogy that nobody liked about beavers and their genitalia, but Margaret Atwood was absolutely right. For some reason, every time we have an advantage and we're backed into a corner, we immediately chicken out and offer up to our tormentors that which is most advantageous and useful to us--in this case, the trade advantage that we enjoy with the Canadian Wheat Board.
So give us a break. We're on a roll here. The last amendment passed. We could end this night with a whole series of amendments passing with a little bit of flexibility, a little bit of pride. Where's our national pride? I'm a fiercely proud Canadian nationalist, and I don't like unilaterally forfeiting what I consider to be our economic sovereignty.