Madam Speaker, I am grateful for the opportunity to speak about the internal trade agreement. I will talk about why I believe free trade agreements are good both internationally and internally within Canada. I will follow that with a brief analysis of what the bill does and does not do as it reflects on internal trade in Canada. I will detail some specifics about why the Reform Party has difficulty supporting the bill. I will wrap up my speech by specifically talking about the energy chapter, or the missing energy chapter, the one we have been promised repeatedly over the last couple of years which we are still waiting to see come to fruition.
I would like to detail why the internal trade agreement is so valuable to the people of Quebec as well as to all Canadians. I would like the separatists in Quebec to consider the idea that the bringing down of interprovincial trade barriers presupposes that we have provinces around which there are barriers. There is no guarantee that if a province separates from Canada the move for free trade within our borders will continue.
Some of the benefits which Quebec now receives within the Canadian Confederation are not a sure thing if it goes its way. NAFTA, GATT and the internal trade agreements all suddenly become up in the air for the province, then the country of the Quebec. I urge them as they consider their options in the years to come that they keep that in mind.
For instance, Quebec exported more to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick in 1989 than to any country in Europe, including France. Quebec sold as much to Ontario as it did to the United States. That is important. Quebec has a huge trade within Canada and the separatists put that at risk when they start talking about separation. It is no wonder the economy of Montreal and all of Quebec is in turmoil right now as they consider their options.
The business people in Quebec know the truth. The truth is Canada is good for Quebec and they should know that. To start tossing around the idea that they could just go their own way, everything would be copacetic and not to worry about it, is not telling the truth to the people within their own borders. Quebec benefits from trade within Canada. I will read a couple of statistics about how much benefit it is for some of the provinces.
It is interesting that only 23 per cent of British Columbia's total exports go interprovincially. In B.C. 76 to 77 per cent of its exports
go internationally. We in British Columbia are not totally dependent on the internal trade agreement and the freedom it would allow although obviously it is a good thing for all Canadians. Most of our product in B.C. is exported to other countries.
Take some of the other provinces. In Quebec 51 per cent of its total exports go to other provinces. The majority of its exports go to provinces, not to other countries, not to Europe, not to the emerging Asian markets. Most of its trade is internal trade. If those in the Bloc Quebecois put their thinking caps on, they would realize they are not doing any favours to their constituents by proposing the breakup of Canada when more than half of Quebec's trade goes to other provinces.
Alberta exports 61 per cent of its trade to other provinces. Alberta understands the importance of the internal free trade agreement and of being part of Canada.
Whether we are talking about dairy products, manufactured goods or whatever, Quebec benefits from being part of Canada. The separatists should toss out this idea of leaving Canada which is harming not only Quebec's business prospects but is also creating that political uncertainty which is hurting the rest of the country. I hope we will hear more talk that they are looking forward to acceptable change from Canada. Many of us are looking for acceptable attitudes from the Bloc Quebecois too.
We would like to see an acceptance that this is a mutually beneficial thing. Quebec and Canada together is the way we should have it. Read the statistics. We are not going to be held hostage on this. We hold some pretty good cards in this game and we are not about to hand over the whole deck to those who say they want to take their ball and go home. I urge them to reconsider their political agenda which I think is harming not only Quebec but also the rest of Canada.
While Ontario is Quebec's most important trading partner within Canada, Quebec ran a deficit in its trade with Ontario and its surplus came from trade with more distant provinces. In other words when we think of trade it is not just Ontario trade; Quebec trades with all the provinces in big numbers. If we were to add up all the numbers that all the provinces trade, in fact as much trade goes on interprovincially as goes on with the rest of the world. Interprovincial trade is key.
The Reform Party campaigned in the election in favour of the free trade agreement. We made no bones about it. We said we anticipated that the world was going to go toward a rules based free trade economy and that we had best get on the bandwagon because that bandwagon was heading out of town. The best way to ensure prosperity for Canadians was to ensure that we were on the free trade bandwagon.
We said free trade should move ahead. Reform Party members said we would sign the NAFTA and the GATT if it came to that. We said that if 150 countries, give or take, in the rest of the world want to sign a free trade agreement based on a rules base trade agreement, we were to be one of the 150 because trade, export-import, is the future of the country.
We also said during the campaign that one thing which could make free trade work for Canada, although it has not always worked for Canada, is to resolve the internal trade barriers first. There are $6.5 billion of internal trade barriers within Canada. Everything from milk to beer costs Canadians more because of internal trade barriers. It is not right. If we are thinking of exporting to the world, at the very least we should be able to ensure there is also the right to export within the country.
Let me read where this agreement is taking us. What was the situation before this agreement came into force? Why was the Reform Party so adamant about one particular power which should be strengthened by the federal government? Everybody says the Reform Party wants to dismember the federal government. There are many areas where it should be out of business. One area it should strengthen is the right to strike down internal trade barriers. Section 121 of the BNA act states, and has always been the case: "All articles of growth, produce or manufacture of any one of the provinces shall be admitted free into each of the other provinces". Those are the rules around which somehow the federal government has allowed $6.5 billion in trade barriers to be erected between all provinces.
We have gone over this already somewhat, but we find ourselves in a situation in which transportation companies say it is easier to transport goods north and south across the border than it is interprovincially. Stocking requirements for shelves state certain products can be more visible or displayed more attractively on a shelf than others. Interprovincial trade barriers have arisen to the tune of $6.5 billion, even though the BNA states all provinces shall be permitted free access into each of the other provinces. It cannot be more clear than that.
The federal government has a responsibility and a legal right to ensure that we have free access between provinces. We do not need a better right than that. It is true free trade when there is the right for growth, produce and manufacture from any of the provinces to be admitted freely between provinces. What is needed is a federal government with the guts to do something about it.
It should not be done after the NAFTA, after the GATT. We are still trying to get this internal trade agreement right. Meanwhile the band wagon is well out of town and the free trade agreement is
gone. It is no wonder some people say international free trade agreements have not been as good for Canada as they couldhave been.
I would still argue they had to go ahead. However, federal governments past and present should have moved quicker and with more vigour on the idea of striking down internal trade barriers within our own country. If free trade had begun at home, people would have accepted it, seen the benefits and been far more accepting of the NAFTA and GATT that followed.
I have to mention specifically what happened during the campaign when many dairy farmers in my riding were promised by the Liberal government that it would not sign the GATT without a strengthened and clarified article 11.2(c). I heard Liberal candidates swear they would lie down on the railroad tracks to stop the deal. They would resign from caucus, which given today's activities might have been a good first step. They said they would never sign the agreement unless article 11.2(c), dairy quotas and tariffication, were strengthened and clarified.
The government did not even have time to read that document before it signed it. It was signed knowing full well that during the campaign it would sign. It was signed with out any strengthening, without any clarification. It went immediately to tariffication.
It was one of those promises that caused a lot of Liberals to get red under the collar during the campaign. They did not follow through on that to the dairy farmers in my area. The truth in advertising council should look into that.
There were some wild promises, including the Deputy Prime Minister's promises on the GST, including free votes in the House of Commons, including-I do not want to pick on your position, Madam Speaker-the promise from the red book that they would have deputy speakers from the opposition parties in the Chair. What happened to all the promises?
The red book has gone from the non-fiction section of the library and is now firmly ensconced in the fiction section of the library. I saw someone walking out of here a while ago with a red book. The sucker is only half as thick as it used to be. They are tearing pages out of it as they walk, trying to make sure people do not get a good look at it. It will be interesting how the promises part of this develops.
I remind people watching, specifically those in my riding, that on that article in the GATT there was enough misleading information from the Liberals to gag a dairy cow in my riding.
What does this provincial trade agreement actually move toward? We used to have total free trade. We had free trade on everything that was produced, grown or manufactured, which basically covers it. What does article 101 of this provincial trade agreement state? I would think the government might want a strengthened article on that. The article states the objective of the agreement is to reduce and eliminate to the extent possible barriers to the free movement of goods and services.
Notice the transition here is not a positive one. We went from free trade in anything grown, produced or manufactured to free trade wherever possible according to the government. Is this an improvement? This is not an improvement. This is not an improved internal trade agreement.
What does "to the extent possible" mean? Does it mean that when a separatist government says a barrier cannot come down it must stay up? Does it mean that if someone gets a lobby group or a special interest group that might be funded by the government to aggressively lobby the government, the barrier has to stay up? What does it mean? No one knows for sure because it is "to the extent possible" that the government will remove internal barriers. That is not good enough. It is one of the powers which the Reform Party has consistently said should be strengthened by the federal government.
We have said much can be realigned in the federal-provincial scheme. If the provinces think they can do a better job, that they can handle it better, that they have the resources and they want to look after a lot of what is currently done by the federal government, we say more power to them, have a nice day, let us do it.
However, one of the powers the federal government needs to retain if it is to have a union from coast to coast is the right to strike down internal trade barriers. It cannot hand that over to the provinces. If it strikes down the economic activity between provinces, divisions will be created which create political divisiveness, interprovincial squabbles, business fights, uncompetitiveness, cost to consumers and cost to taxpayers. It is not acceptable to allow people, businesses or provinces to erect trade barriers within our country when we are looking for trade barriers to come down around the world.
This legislation is a step in the wrong direction. A promise was made in March 1994 just after the first federal budget. The industry minister stated the federal government is committed to working toward an agreement which is clear and concise, has a set of rules that will eliminate protective measures, and includes an effective and enforceable dispute settlement mechanism.
This agreement does not do that. If it did all of that I would say let us go for it, let us give it a whirl and see if it will work. There are entire areas untouched by this agreement. There are certain agricultural products untouched. Certain government procurement and regional development tools are untouched.
The energy chapter is not even there. The government is asking us to sign something that is not even there. There are about 14 chapters in this agreement. The energy chapter is a blank page. That would be bad enough except the government said the blank page would be filled in July 1995. July came and went and there was no page. It is a document that we need on the energy sector, one of the most important sectors of this agreement. September rolled around. September 1995 was when it would happen but in September 1995 the agreement was blank again.
There is no agreement on energy. We are being asked by the government to support an internal trade agreement in which at least in the area I am critiquing the chapter is non-existent. There is nothing there. It is a blank page.
We are being asked: "Trust me. I will sign it later and we will negotiate something. Just give me the power now". That is not good enough. Unfortunately, this deal of signing agreements and negotiating something later is typical of this government. It asked us to do that on the Yukon land claims settlement. It asked us to do it on the internal trade agreements. The government has asked us to entrust it to do something through order in council on many bills where it says: "We are not sure what it means. We do not know when it will come into force. We do not know how we will do it but let us pass it".
I say let us not pass it. Let us pass agreements and bills in this House which are complete. If the government needs more time to complete the bill, by all means take some time but do not ask us to approve bills in this House which are not full and complete. With this internal trade agreement that is a problem.
I will talk specifically on the energy chapter. This is the chapter which I find the fact that it is not filled out paints the picture for how effective this agreement is going to be. If we do not have a chapter on energy I would argue we do not have an internal trade agreement.
Agriculture is missing too. I guess it will be internal trade on widgets and foo-foos but that is not good enough. We need internal free trade within this country and we need it on the two most important products in the country, at least agriculture and energy. If the government cannot get an agreement on them, then it should withdraw the bill until the negotiations are complete. When negotiations are complete and the government has an agreement to present to the House of Commons, then we will vote on it. We have to vote no if there is no agreement in place because we will not give the government permission to write a blank cheque.
I mentioned that the chapter covering energy was supposed to be completed in July 1995. Then it was supposed to be completed in September 1995. That deadline also came and went. Now the officials are working on yet another draft of the energy sector chapter. The council of energy ministers promises again that August of this year is when the energy sector chapter is going to be completed. It is going to be completed almost for sure a year or so late.
What are we led to believe about this chapter and about this agreement? History tells us that politics will get in the way of common sense again, that the energy chapter may well go unwritten again. There has already been one written that they cannot agree with but it will probably go unwritten, unendorsed one more time.
I am afraid that sums up the progress to date of the energy ministers on this important matter. The blank page is rather symbolic of the entire agreement. It just shows again that the government cannot come through with its promise on internal trade and it is asking us to trust it to come up with something in the future.
I for one am not prepared to do that and I am surprised the Liberal members are prepared to do that. I would think they would say to their minister: "Let us wait until we get the complete document". It is unbelievable. For example when buying a car suppose I say: "I will sign the contract to buy the car. I see it has no wheels on it but I will buy it. Sometime when you think you want to fill out the contract about when I get the wheels, let us talk. I will be happy to do it". Nobody signs contracts like that.
In essence this bill is a contract between the provinces and between the federal government and the provinces and between the Canadian people by inference and all the provinces. The deal being signed is just not there and I am not prepared to do that. The Liberal backbenchers, at the very least, should not be prepared to do it either.
I mentioned the size of interprovincial trade and how important it is. It is critically important for the country that this is done correctly. I do not want to belabour the whole thing, but I can give members a list of how many agreements we have had. Somebody mentioned being here for 12 years. We had the Macdonald commission which recommended the elimination of trade barriers in 1984. In 1987 the committee of ministers on internal trade said that we had to get rid of internal trade barriers. In 1989 a memorandum of agreement stated we had to get rid of them. The maritimes then signed a memorandum of agreement. In 1991 six governments tried to get rid of an interprovincial agreement on beer marketing practices. That is how specific we are in this country. Six governments tried to get together to try to decide how to put a beer on the shelf. They come to sort of an agreement but one still cannot sell beer interprovincially unless one has a brewery in every province.
We come to the intergovernmental agreement on government procurement but that is also a difficult one to enforce. This goes on and on. In 1992, 1993 and 1994 the ministers backed away from completely eliminating internal trade barriers. There are about 11 sectors that they cannot solve yet they are now coming to us and asking approval for it.
I would like to wrap this up by saying that there is a long history in this country of promising one thing on the internal trade agreements and delivering nothing on the other.
We have a case in point which we have just gone through. I hope that sometime during discussions on this bill the new member for Labrador will get to his feet and talk about the energy chapter, the missing chapter, that should go into this agreement. I would like that member to say that the people of Labrador are sick and tired of the fact there is no energy chapter in this internal trade agreement. I hope that he will stand up and say: "I am not satisfied with the way Labrador has been treated over the years on the internal trade issue. I am not satisfied with the fact that Labrador does not have access to the hydro lines in Quebec if it wants to build the lower Churchill. We are not satisfied in Labrador with the fact that they take our tax dollars and we do not even have a gravel road that we can drive on".
I hope the member stands up and says: "The money that we could have made if we had a proper internal trade agreement in place would look after the entire transfer payments to my province". If the people in Labrador had a decent internal trade agreement they would not even need transfer payments from the federal government.
I hope that member from Labrador has the guts to stand up in the House of Commons and say that he is sick and tired of the fact that Labrador has been shafted and shafted again when it comes to an agreement.
Quebec has consistently refused to allow Labrador to build lines in Quebec. Furthermore, Quebec has consistently refused to allow Labrador to wheel power through its existing power grid. Instead it is forced to sell that power to Quebec at ridiculous 1969 prices to be resold to the Americans to the tune of $800 million to $1 billion a year.
The people of Labrador, with some justification, are sick and tired of that. I hope the new member for Labrador has the gumption to stand up and say that the government had better get it right on internal trade. He had better tell the minister that he is not going to be satisfied with the namby-pamby promises that some day in the future Labrador will be able to benefit from its own power sources.
I would hope that he would stand up and say: "This has gone on long enough. You have put Labrador in a catch-22 position". Labrador has to find a contract before it will be allowed to build power lines but it cannot build power lines until it gets the contract. They whipsaw Labrador back and forth.
By the way, Madam Speaker, the Reform Party went from 0 per cent to 30 per cent of the vote in the last byelection. I hope that the new member for Labrador is paying attention. There is within Labrador a separatist movement now. They have elected an independent MLA to sit in their own legislature. The reason for this is because they have been shafted. They are sick and tired of it. They do not want to leave Canada but they are tired of being fed pabulum and lies by the federal government. They are tired of being fed pabulum and lies even by their own provincial government. Both are Liberal governments by the way. They are tired of being beholden to another part of the country or to other Canadians when they should be and have the right to be independent.
I call on the government, when it writes this energy chapter, to then bring this internal trade agreement back to the House for ratification. When it writes the energy chapter it should include Labrador's concerns. You can bet your bottom dollar the reason the government cannot get an energy agreement right now is that Quebec will not sign and agree to binding arbitration because Quebec is afraid of what Labrador is going to get.
I would urge the member for Labrador to do his homework, study this and not to support this bill until that is fixed. Labrador deserves more.