Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, colleagues.
At the beckoning of my colleague from the NDP, we went through my colleague Mr. Redekopp's motion word for word on getting the ministers before this committee to answer to the decisions they've made in this respect. I have gone through it word by word right here in committee, at the request of everyone. There is absolutely nothing in here that puts any blame on the victims, and anybody who wants to put out the narrative that there is victim blaming here is producing something that doesn't exist. We've even added, at the behest of my colleague from the Bloc Québécois, Mr. Brunelle-Duceppe, a clause that specifically states that the victims here are not the ones to blame.
We're a compassionate Canadian society. We're bringing in immigrants from around the world. In order to do that we have to have places for them to land and live here, and we've shirked that responsibility as Canadians. Who's the lead on that, as far as immigration goes? It is the federal department of immigration, led by the minister of immigration. It's led by two ministers of immigration now, one of whom seems to be undoing some tracks of his predecessor and stating very publicly that this was done wrong and that we would like to make sure that these mistakes don't happen again.
However, I go back to the point that there's nothing in here, in these words written in very clear English, that has anything to do with victim blaming. Those words come out the mouths of certain people who are establishing a narrative, and it is not anything written on paper that does that.
Yes, as Mr. Brunelle-Duceppe points out, there have been 157 years of either Liberal or Conservative governments in Canada, but I will point out that since my time here in 2019, this Liberal government has only been in government with the support of the New Democratic Party. The New Democratic Party here might want to look in the mirror and say, “Maybe there's a better way of doing this,” as opposed to giving carte blanche support to not having ministers appear here to answer for what they've done and why they've done it, which is the nature of this motion.
How did this situation arise? Can you please explain whether you undertook this effort without considering the consequences to housing in Canada and where our newcomers would be housed? I mean, for Pete's sake, some of these students are living four people to a box, and that is not what we expect in Canada. We expect to be open and welcoming and to have housing, food, health care and services available for all the people who come to this country.
I'm going to speak a bit about economic development in housing, because somehow there's a narrative that if the private sector weren't building this, the public sector would do better. I've yet to see one example, including in this ministry, of the public sector actually performing better than the private sector. The private sector does respond to price signals. Is there an ability here to build something that provides a profitable outcome and makes a product available? All the bureaucracy built into building houses right now in Canada needs a solution beyond the government throwing more money at a wall. There are all kinds of impediments to building houses.
Let's look at this from a time perspective. I can tell you that four years ago in Calgary, there were a lot of vacant places. There aren't right now, partially because people have come from jurisdictions run by the New Democratic Party after they recognized that things had gone too far out of control in housing costs and they moved to jurisdictions where housing is actually cheaper. As a result, the cost of housing has gone up significantly in jurisdictions like mine, but the costs are still not as high as they are in the NDP-run province to the west of Alberta, and that's, as I said, the construction of a narrative that is neither constructive nor realistic.
The last part I want to discuss here is this diversion from responsibility. If we're going to divert from who's responsible here as far as the immigration system is concerned—and that is the intent in not supporting this motion—because we're not looking at who should be or is responsible, then we're not holding the decision-makers to account.
All of us around this table are supposed to be held accountable by our constituents. You show up here and you make decisions with Canadians' money, with Canadians' social system, with Canadians' futures, yet there's no accountability whatsoever.
I would prefer if my colleagues passed this motion so that we would actually be able to discuss this matter with both ministers. We can then find out how we arrived at these decisions and how we can do better next time, as opposed to just sweeping it under the rug.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.