Thank you, Chair.
I want to start with a comment about the relationship between McKinsey and the opioid crisis. As I think is relatively well known by now, Purdue Pharma was largely responsible for the opioid crisis by overpromoting with false information new opioid products it produced. They were presented as sort of the catch-all, problem-free solution to pain, and they led to intense personal pain and trauma for so many families, which is continuing.
At a time when people were becoming aware of many of these problems, Purdue Pharma sought the assistance of McKinsey to try to whitewash what was going on. McKinsey worked with Purdue Pharma and gave it advice that would horrify the moral sensibilities of most Canadians about the various tools it could use to try to keep the money pouring in at the expense of people who were negatively affected by opioid substance use disorders.
The Conservatives' proposal is to make the pushers of these drugs pay financially for all of the costs associated with the opioid crisis and to put that money into prevention, treatment and recovery—to make the pushers pay for the problems they caused and to use those resources to assist the people who are struggling.
The approach of the current government, by contrast, is to continue to pay the pushers, to continue to allow McKinsey to benefit from lucrative government contracts and to have a so-called safe supply policy that continues to see money go to Purdue Pharma to produce opioid products that are then given away at taxpayers' expense to people who are struggling. They are paying the pushers while we want to make the pushers pay.
What would you say to Canadians who find it deeply troubling and offensive that companies like McKinsey and Purdue Pharma are still cashing in big time as a result of government contracts instead of being held accountable for the damage they caused?