Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses.
I know you said that time is short and runs fast, but you missed the second half, which is that this is also where logic comes to die.
We have some great witnesses here today. I'd love to talk to Mr. Keith Dicker and let him know that we're maybe both wearing our “no central bank digital currency” shirts underneath our tie and suit jacket. There's Mr. Blair, who actually has a proposed project in Orillia. I think we should be able to get back to the witnesses. There is some very good testimony to be had here.
I won't take very long, Mr. Chair, other than to say that if the motion is the way it is currently written, we won't be getting a vote on it. I'll just put the position out there. If we want to try to pass the motion in its current form, we're not voting on it today. We'll talk until midnight tonight or until whenever we have resources for. People want to go home, and I understand that, but that's our initial position.
We have proposed some language, which I think is being considered right now, that would allow us to bring this motion to a vote. Since it's a report to the House, anybody can stand up in that chamber and say whatever they want about any premier in the entire country, but we cannot approve the way the motion is written right now, with the third bullet: “Stands with the majority of Albertans who are opposed to Premier Danielle Smith's dangerous plan to withdraw from the Canada Pension Plan that threaten the pensions of millions of seniors and hard-working Canadians from coast to coast.”
We cannot approve that, for multiple reasons, not the least of which is that nobody even knows what Albertans think right now. They're going to be asked what they think. I personally believe they should be encouraged to stay in the CPP. I have other colleagues who may have different views. That is up to Albertans to decide. There's a whole process by which provinces can consider whether they would withdraw from the CPP.
My personal belief is that I don't think the methodology underpinning what assets are to be given to the CPP makes sense. That being said, I don't actually know what Albertans believe now. I would prefer that we encourage them to stay in it so that we can secure the CPP for all Canadians who are currently part of the program, including those people in Ontario.
With that, Mr. Chair, I think there are some discussions going on. We have the witnesses here.
Mr. Cooper, Kellie Leitch says hello. We should maybe have MP Michael Cooper come question Mr. Cooper and confuse the translators.
Since there are still some discussions going on and we have the witnesses here, I will move a motion that we have another six-minute round while the discussions are still happening, so we can use the time with our witnesses well.