I want to very clearly mention, since we were talking about minutes on November 1, that the motion I moved is that “the committee consider infrastructure programs of other countries, such as Germany, the U.S. and Australia, and that the study be reported to the House of Commons”.
The document that was circulated was meant as a reference guide. That reference guide was requested from me by Mr. Poilievre, and since we were going to be studying infrastructure anyway, there was a discussion as to what kinds of witnesses and what is the scope.... I thought it would be advantageous for all members to broaden our horizon to look at what's happening in other countries. Unfortunately, some of my friends across the way did not agree with that.
But I do want to say to some members who have talked publicly about the NDP pushing for such a tax that it's blatantly untrue, and no amount of manipulation of the minutes will actually give you the sense that this is what we're pushing for.
The only thing I was doing was putting some ideas in front of the committee and have us look at the example of other countries. To try to make a big deal out of it I think is not very fair, and it's neither here nor there at this point because my motion to study other countries was defeated.
Mr. Chair, in two meetings' time we will need to figure out who will be the witnesses coming in to talk about red tape reduction, more bidders, and the very narrowly focused discussion on infrastructure.