Mr. Speaker, the issue we are trying to discuss today is important to Canadians. As was mentioned earlier by one of my colleagues, it is one of the top three or four items listed on correspondence I receive from my constituents about abuses of taxpayers trust, abuses of taxpayers hard earned tax dollars. They want to see the issue discussed and MP pensions properly fixed.
It is extremely disappointing that on the government side there is no one speaking out in favour of the legislation, talking about how proud they are of the legislation, talking about the details of the legislation and hoping to convince Canadians that the legislative idea has any merit whatsoever.
If they were proud of the legislation, if they would go on the public record and be counted, I could perhaps believe that they actually meant what they were talking about. I do not see that.
Reformer after Reformer gets up and speaks. On the government side there are a few words about not talking about it. Other than that they just want to plough ahead. If they made these comments at a public town hall meeting in my riding supporting the MP pension plan, it would be better to have a car running and parked behind the stage. By the time they finished the speech the tomatoes would start flying and they would be on the run. This nonsense from the government side would never sell in Fraser Valley East.
There are many symbols we are proud of in Canada. We are proud of our hockey teams. We are proud of our flag. We had reference to the 30th anniversary of our flag recently. We are even kind of proud of our winters in the great Canadian north. We are proud of our peacekeepers. We like the Calgary Stampede. These are positive symbols that Canadians like to rally around.
However, the MP pension plan is also a symbol. It symbolizes waste. It symbolizes why Canadian taxpayers do not trust the politicians they put in charge of the public purse. It is symbolic. It symbolizes political arrogance that has been inbred after years and years of trying to pull the wool over their eyes. They think the symbolism of public distrust is somehow okay. It is not okay. Canadians in my riding have no stomach for half baked change. I will not call it reform. It is an abuse to call it reform.
I sent out a questionnaire in my riding and I would like to give some of the results in case members wonder how much support there is for the MP pension plan. Most Canadians feel an MP pension plan is all right. Eighty-five per cent of the people said that there should be an MP pension plan. They do not have a problem with that. That does not surprise me. Canadians are generous and understand there should be a reasonable pension plan.
However, listen to the kind of pension plan they consider reasonable. In my riding the constituents said that the member should be at least 58 years old and have worked at least 15 years and that the pension should not be indexed. That is the minimum requirement they expect of members of Parliament.
What does the half baked change call for? Members still get a fully indexed pension after six years of service. They can still get 75 per cent of their best earning years. It is still a gold plated, feed at the trough pension plan. If I voted in favour of it I would be ashamed to go home.
There are no speakers on the other side but I cannot believe the verbal nonsense they utter. I would love to be invited to any Liberal riding in Canada to debate the issue. I will make the trek from this place or my place back home to their ridings to debate the MP pension plan on the public stage. They would be ashamed to issue the same type of guttural nonsense we hear from that side in a public forum.
Here there is no public to throw tomatoes at them. Here they are not answering directly to the voters. That is why they are not saying anything. They are not on the public record. They are just letting it slide by. They hope we will be quiet so that they can slip it through like other pieces of nonsense the Liberals have brought forward.
There are things other than this wasteful MP pension plan that are starting to become symbolic of liberalism. One is the idea that they can jump across a huge chasm in two short leaps. It is what they did on the budget. They recognized there was a problem. They realized that we had to balance the budget. What did they do? Instead of taking the aggressive moves necessary to get us across the chasm, to give us a game plan to span that chasm, they said they would jump halfway across and as soon as they started to come down they would try to figure out how to make the next jump to get the rest of the way. It is symbolic of liberalism. It is a half baked, half hearted attempt.
The MP pension plan is probably the most visible and most disgusting item. They make a small change, hoping that people will consider it to be a real change. They may even pawn it off as a reform, which of course it is not, and hope they can cross the chasm of MP pension reform in two jumps. They cannot cross a chasm in two jumps. They either mean it or they do not. When they start to make the jump they had better have in mind whether or not they mean it.
Time and again I have said there is nothing wrong with an MP pension plan. People just want a reasonable plan. They want an MP pension plan matching dollar for dollar, one to one, just like hundreds of thousands of other pension plans where the employer matches one to one. It should not be three or four to one. It should not be a special deal for members of Parliament. It should be the same deal as everyone else gets.
The other day we found out that the mileage members of Parliament can claim on their cars is higher than anyone else in the private sector can claim or higher than any other government employee can claim. Members of Parliament have a special mileage rate.
I do not mind submitting expenses. By all means it is legitimate. I put in my expense form for my mileage, crossed out the new rate and put down the old rate. Until Canadian people can charge that much I am not going to accept it. However it came back stating that I could not do that, that I had to accept the new rate.
What are they thinking about? Why would we have one set of rules for parliamentarians and another set of rules for ordinary Canadians? That duplicity, that double standard, has lowered Canadians' trust in politicians.
It is not what we are saying in the Reform Party. We are merely illustrating, highlighting or echoing the concerns of people in our constituencies. We are merely pointing them out. We are just taking the highlighting pen and showing Canadians what the Liberals are doing in case they are interested, and they are. That is all we are doing. We are not writing this garbage legislation. We did not come up with this kind of half hearted proposal. We have come up with an alternative.
The member for Beaver River stands to say that she will opt out of the program. It is going to cost her $1.5 million. If I wore a hat, my hat would be off. I respect someone who stands on principles instead of diving into a sea of gravy and keeping afloat. I respect the principles she espouses.
I issue one more challenge. I will argue the issue with the Liberals anywhere they want. I will not be taken up on it. I guess it is a cheap thing to promise. In any event I promise I will do it if they would like to debate it.
I also issue a challenge to the Bloc. All Reform Party members are going to opt out of the pension plan because we stand on principle and do not swim in gravy. We are going to opt out. The Bloc members want to opt out of Canada. My next challenge is that I would expect every one of the 53 Bloc members of Parliament to opt out of the MP pension plan because they do not want to be part of Canada anyway. That is the second challenge.
First, I will debate anyone over on the other side who wants to debate. It is not going to happen but I sure would love to do it. Second is an announcement that all MPs from the Reform Party will opt out because we stand on principle. Last, I expect every member of the Bloc Quebecois to opt out. I would love to see it written in the papers. I would like it to happen as soon as possible to see if there are any principles over there or whether it is another chance to grab the gravy train.