This is why this is relevant. I am going to read part of the amendment to the motion. The new paragraph (f) states that the documents “be available at the clerk's office for viewing by committee members only, for one week to be designated by the committee no later than 30 days following the receipt of the contracts” and that “the supervision of the clerk and that no personal mobile, electronic or recording devices of any kind be permitted in the room”.
Why are we guarding confidential information? I would say that we're putting forward a reasonable path. We're allowing all members of Parliament around this table to take a look at the unredacted document, everything in it—everything—but at the same time, we're saying that we want to provide some safeguards here that keep certain information out of the public realm because it undermines the contracts. It undermines the confidentiality that, in the business world, the real world of business and industry, is absolutely vital. That's the point I'm making.
Again, as the Heer Law report states, “51% of Canada's economy is represented by knowledge-based industries”. Think about that for a second. What we do here, the precedent that we set here tonight, has the potential to impact half of Canadian companies—half—because they are knowledge-based industries. That's the precedent we're setting here today, and that's why we are being so careful with it, and responsible. Think about it: 51% of knowledge-based industries that care about confidentiality, care about trust, care about what information is shared.
My goodness, I talked about the shipyards. I talked about aerospace. Telecommunications is another sector—same thing. I can go down the list of all the industries—all the industries—that are based and operate on trust and confidentiality and that jealously guard their information and their strategies.
We are willing today.... We have a path forward, as put forward by my colleague, who has been in business, understands it, has been in the real world and understands the importance of confidentiality of agreements. He has put forward an amendment that achieves that, allowing us to have that level of accountability, of oversight, but protect Canada's position as a trusted leader, a trusted partner, with a reputation that we have spent decades building. That is why this is important in this committee. That is why it matters. That is why partners and stakeholders in our community need to know the discussions that are taking place here and the positions that MPs around this table are taking.
I'm not willing to undermine a $5-billion battery plant in my community for a TikTok video—good luck. I'm not going to sign up to that and I'm not going to sign up to weakening Canada's position as a trusted partner in manufacturing, in industry, in aerospace, in telecommunications. Trust is important.
We were sent here to represent our communities. It's a fundamental role of democracy. That is the sacred and hallowed contract between us and our communities. We understand that, and that's why we're putting forward the opportunity for members of Parliament representing their constituents to take a look at the contract. I'll tell you, I see the campaign of misinformation and disinformation whose sole purpose is to erode national support and trust in the battery plant that is so important to my community.
Now, we've opened up a second front. By this original motion, we want to undermine the world's trust in Canada. We've had $30 billion of foreign investment in just the last two years. We're number three in terms of foreign direct investment in the world. Countries are coming to partner with us to build things here and to lead the world here. Do we want to tell them that they can't trust us, that they can't be partners and that we don't believe in confidentiality? This is what's at stake here—this is what's at stake.
When companies can't trust the federal government and partner with us, and if we can't secure their information and their strategies—you can call it intellectual property, patents, strategies or information—then they're gone. They're gone.
Who pays the consequence? It's not the people around this table, I'll tell you that much. It's the workers. It's Canadian workers. When we are not acting responsibly, it's Canadians workers who pay the price, because the business goes elsewhere. Man, the margins are so tight when you're competing for investment.
We know that capital is mobile—it's global and can go anywhere—and we're literally giving them reasons to go elsewhere. We have 20 million Canadians working right now who are depending on us to make reasonable and responsible decisions.
There is an amendment here that is reasonable and responsible. I honestly cannot understand why that middle road, that middle way, the compromise and responsible path forward, is not adopted by the members of this committee. I don't understand it.
There are four companies here representing close to $30 billion of investment. There's Stellantis in Windsor. There's Volkswagen in St. Thomas, another community that has known hard times and has lost investment and manufacturing plants to other jurisdictions. There is Northvolt, a company that wants to set up shop in Quebec—3,000 workers in Quebec. You don't think they're looking at this circus and having second thoughts and having a pause? What kind of partners are we? There's Umicore in Loyalist, near Kingston, a rechargeable battery plant—again, thousands of workers. This is what we're putting on the line here.
I go back to President Lana Payne of Unifor and the article she published in the Windsor Star, which I believe was published nationally as well. Lana Payne is the president of Unifor nationally, which is the largest private sector union in all of Canada, with 300,000 members. The title of her opinion piece is “Canadians deserve better than misinformed battery plant debate”. They certainly deserve better. This is what Lana Payne writes:
Never let the truth get in the way of a good story.
The famous quote from American author and funny-man Mark Twain helps summarize the firestorm surrounding Windsor’s NextStar battery plant.
What started as an innocuous social media post from, of all groups, the Windsor Police Service has become a fire-and-brimstone level debate in this country.
It's a national debate.