Well, perhaps the honourable member could tell me that, since it was his government that was in power at the time when this MOU was signed. And I thank him for that, because I think it was the right decision at the time. Being part of this memorandum of understanding with the joint strike fighter program has offered unprecedented benefits to Canadian companies over the last decade.
You're correct; if you look at the history of the JSF program, you'll see that Canada entered in 1997. There was a lengthy and rigorous and competitive process that took place. It was U.S.-led, but all allies were partners to that. We participated in the process and all partner nations, including Canada, were a part of this, which led, as you know, to the selection of Lockheed Martin as the partner for the JSF manufacture.
The important thing to recognize is that because we are part of the memorandum of understanding for the joint strike fighter program, we have an opportunity to procure through the MOU. If perhaps your party were elected and you decided to turn your back on this MOU or pull us out of the MOU—or if you decided to hold another competition, which would signal that we would be out of the MOU—it would obviously impact Canadian industry because we would no longer have priority access to the global supply chain, which we do today thanks to our participation in the MOU. We would lose our spot in the production line, so we would incur delays in the procurement process and we would also pay more for these planes.
Again, your government was the one that signed the original MOU and participated in this program, and I thank you for that because this has been a historic opportunity for Canadian companies to date. We've seen almost $800 million in benefits up to now, and we expect billions of dollars more in benefits to Canadian industries. At the end of the day, this is about jobs.
Yesterday I was at Héroux-Devtek. They have 1,500 employees. They have two plants in Ontario and three plants in Quebec, and they make parts on the F-35. Every F-35 that's sold to partner nations around the world means more job creation just at that one company, and we know of 90 companies like it across the country.