Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Turnbull, for admitting that you didn't pay any attention to what Mr. Perkins said when he put his amendment forward, because he did say that he wanted to include the consumer carbon tax in this motion. In fact, he was expanding the scope to include it, so your assertion that we don't want to talk about it is actually wrong. Thank you for putting on the record that you weren't paying any attention. I appreciate that.
I also appreciate how, previously, you put on the record publicly that consumers are going to face some significant pain because of your carbon tax. You admitted in public that people are going to have to pay up, and it is going to hurt. Those were your own words, so you were very clear about that, and that is exactly what we are seeing all across the country. People are in a lot of pain because of the economic ruin that you imposed upon this country—I think that's abundantly clear. That's why we would like to include the consumer carbon tax into this motion as well. Those were your own words, that people are going to experience a lot of pain. Let's see here. What were the words that you used? Was it “economic certainty”? Is that what it is? The economic certainty is that people are going to feel pain. I wonder, is that what you meant?
Then there's the element of dealing with the preamble as well. You've thrown in all these hand-picked statistics and different things like that. You're trying to set the tone for what you want the study to look like, and it's all speculative because the key word in there is “could”—“given that climate change could lead”. What you're insinuating is that it could lead to this.
Now, there are other factors at play here, of course. You look at the dollar values that you've assigned to it. Well, your government has failed on getting a softwood lumber agreement for nine years. That's had a substantive impact on the cost of building materials in this country. There are many other factors that have impacted the cost of building in this country, including your consumer carbon tax, which is a huge factor in that. There are many factors that are at play here, so if you want to have a real conversation about it, let's look at all of it. There's so much more to it than just simply saying, “Oh, climate change could cost $35 billion per year by 2030.” Well, if your government had actually done its job over the last nine years, I'll bet you that number would be nowhere near as high. That includes everything from trade policy to economic development, respecting provincial jurisdiction and allowing the provinces and industry to do what they do best, but you stepped in, every single time, to get in the way.
I'm on the natural resources committee. We're doing a study on the Trans Mountain pipeline. We had the PBO and other witnesses come, and they said that government policy is going to have a direct impact on what someone's going to be willing to pay to buy the pipeline, because of the lack of certainty that has been put in place. When you look at the conditions that are in place, why would anybody want to buy that pipeline when it's going to be almost impossible to have any new development in this country and get anything done? That's the record that your government has, Mr. Turnbull, when it comes to handling the economy and the “economic and social incentive”, as you put here.
When we talk to people, whether it's in meetings or when we go out on the road in our ridings and we tour around businesses, they talk a lot about the number one threat to them. In my riding, which is an agricultural and energy-producing region of the country, it's not climate change that they bring up; it's government policy that they say is the biggest threat to them. I would love to talk about the threat that government policy has been to these businesses, because they tell me on a regular basis how devastating it is and how hard it is to deal with trying to grow and expand their business, let alone just keep the doors open because of bad government policy that's been put forward by you and your government.
If that's what you want to brag about, I would love to hear it, and I would be more than happy to put those people's voices on the record during this study about the economic ruin that you have provided for businesses in Cypress Hills—Grasslands and all across this country.