I think Canadians have an expectation, and I see it, frankly. I had a meeting last week with Adriana LaGrange. We have different political views, but we're able to have civil conversations in which we are solutions-focused. I think that's where Canadians expect us to be, particularly on health.
Even in the House, the work that was done on dental care or pharmacare across partisan lines matters, working with New Democrats to find common ground to make material improvements to the conditions of Canadians' health.
Frankly, googling what's wrong in the world and parroting it adds nothing. It is an act neither of courage nor of intelligence to reflect what's not working in the world. What require work and courage are solutions.
The only time in the House when the Conservatives have ever asked about health care was when we were asking for the wealthiest in this country to make a small additional contribution. I think it's important to recognize that in the last five years, capital gains and capital wealth have expanded vastly.
I don't hear the Conservatives asking about how we improve the wages of a personal support care worker. I don't hear the Conservatives talking about the wages and working conditions of a nurse. However, when it comes to somebody who is making more than $250,000 a year and the fact that they're going to go from 50% tax off to one-third tax off over $250,000, suddenly they're interested. I think that is concerning. It's a difference, frankly, in philosophy and where I think we need to be spending our attention.
On health workforce issues, what's going to get us to a point of coming out of the difficult situation we were in during COVID and into a circumstance whereby we are able to stabilize our health workforce is the $200 billion in investments we've made with the provinces and territories in those 26 agreements. It is accelerating the support for internationally educated health professionals. It is opening medical residency spots, reducing administration and working collaboratively with provinces, not seeking out fights or partisan differences to put things on social media, but instead finding common ground and solutions.
The thing that frustrates me about the Conservatives is there are no solutions. There's what they would cut. There's what they wouldn't do. They criticize the challenges going on in the world, but when it comes to solutions and practical things that Canadians can see they would do to improve the health care system, there's nothing there.