Thank you, Mr. Chair.
This is in response to my colleague Mr. Fragiskatos' comment.
Even if what you said was true—that this would be a distraction or a concurrence issue—you are the government. The biggest issue, without a doubt, is housing. This motion is saying that we listened to Canadians, we know that things are bad and we're going to do something about it.
According to the Globe, a Royal Bank of Canada report published last week estimated that:
...around $900-billion worth of mortgages at Canadian chartered banks—roughly 60 per cent of outstanding mortgages on their books—will renew between 2024 and 2026.
Depending on the path of interest rates, the average monthly payments on these mortgages could jump 32 per cent next year and as much as 48 per cent in 2026, the report estimates.
Mr. Chair, here is my point in saying this: There are politics in this place, one hundred per cent, but if you are not getting the emails, the phone calls, the messages of despair and suffering that we are, I don't know whether you're not answering your phone or what. This is of the utmost urgency.
Our witnesses today are talking about AI. Do you know where we're sitting for productivity in Canada? It's like that. That's going to hurt our mortgages. That's going to hurt people. This is all downloaded to Canadians who have otherwise never paid attention to politics in their lives.
I'm actually making eye contact with you to urge you to pass this motion. Honestly, I came here because people are suffering. You came to Peterborough. I hope you went to Wolfe Street. I hope you saw the people in encampments. I hope you watch social media. I hope you see what is happening to people. They can't feed their families.
Yes, there are politics. That's fine, but we have a duty because we were elected to serve people. Please pass this motion.
Thank you.