Mr. Speaker, I am astonished to hear the former chair of the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans exhibit such ignorance on this matter. He
speaks of the unanimity of the witnesses heard, supposedly in favour of this bill, whereas a number of them, the majority, I would even say, saw a need for change, for very concrete amendments. According to the correspondence and the many phone calls received by the Bloc Quebecois, they would like to see the official opposition reel in this bill to make amendments to it, particularly along the lines of Motions Nos. 2, 3, and 4, the group of motions we are discussing today.
If this hon. member is serious, if this government is serious, let them stop talking about respecting jurisdictions, let them adopt the motions we have presented, which address exactly that. Our hon. colleague from the Reform Party was saying more or less the same thing just now. Moreover, Mr. Speaker, the amendment you are having your officers look at right now is along the lines of what I have referred to. I know they are being guided by your wisdom, Mr. Speaker.
I was saying that, despite arguments by the Government of Quebec, reasonable claims and not matters of privilege, the province's fair share has always been manipulated if not engineered by the government, and worse in the case of a Liberal federal government, because that says it all.
It means engineering and on a grand scale. It means prolific, but unkept, federal election promises-the GST, Canadian heritage, for example, the fact that copyright would be a matter for the Department of Canadian Heritage rather than the Department of Industry-all this appears in the election promises in the red book but it is all swept aside.
After the election, they return to the good old days of Liberal engineering, trickery, the old boys network-as protected by the former Minister of Canadian Heritage, who hosted 20 people at a $2,000 a person cocktail party, thus raising $40,000 for the party. Seven of these people had been given government discretionary contracts directly by his department.
This is the government, with its good old Liberal habits. They look after their friends; they appoint lawyers to head commissions. Out comes the money, and friends are well cared for. When it comes to revealing names in committee on financial protection or transfers of $2 billion, that sort of thing must remain secret, in order to protect party coffers. This is, in essence, the Liberal government. And they ask us to trust them, to believe in them, to trust that things are being done right, that jurisdictions will be respected. When did the federal government ever respect provincial jurisdictions?
Mines are not under its jurisdiction, but it has its nose stuck in them. Same thing for tourism. How many departments has the government stuck its big foot in that, constitutionally, should be run by the provinces? In sticking its big foot in, the government has simply aggravated problems and created division. Is this a government we want to trust?
As the previous speaker, the parliamentary secretary, has just said, we want what is expressed very clearly in amendments Nos. 2, 3 and 4. And yet here again we are dreaming. I remind the parliamentary secretary, who spoke to us earlier, that such dreams are often decisions that were not made at the right time.
We have long wanted to put everything together under a single department and to improve all aspects of management from coast to coast, as the first speaker was saying. We do not, however, want this to be done at our expense, and this division into three parts is exactly what outraged all the opponents who appeared before the committee, as Quebec once again will end up paying the highest price. Once again, this reform will be carried out at our expense.
Even though it is nothing new, even though we are used to being had, in this case, you will hear us on every motion, you will hear us in committee; we will win this fight because the whole population will be strongly opposed. You will have to answer for your actions in the next election campaign, which may come earlier than you think. I do not advise them to go ahead and try.
It would be really bad timing with the kind of bills we have been dealing with lately, especially this one, which will have a very significant economic impact on Quebec. It will turn the situation completely around and may push maritime transport toward the United States, especially Philadelphia, which developed a very aggressive policy to attract clients, or move more deeply into the east as far as Quebec's major ports are concerned.
We would like to improve this bill. We do not want to vote against it, but we would like the government to pay close attention to our suggestions and to take concrete action, that is to say, we would like the Liberals to sign some papers because they never keep their word.
The worst thing that could happen is to give responsibility for such a vague bill to this Prime Minister, who personifies all the Liberal shenanigans since he has been in that party for more than 25 years, as well as their many broken promises and their characteristic administrative mediocrity when in power, and who would reject the logical and proper amendments we are proposing. It would be a little like putting Dracula in charge of the Red Cross blood bank. That is about what would happen if we trusted the government with this. I can hear people in the audience laughing, but the example I just gave you is much more serious than you think.
Like all its predecessors, the Liberal government embodies the failure to honour not only its own commitments but also, when given the opportunity in a bill, the intentions of those who voted in favour, of the committees who heard witnesses, and of the witnesses who came to demand changes or to propose amendments
that would help all the people directly affected by the proposed restructuring.
In closing, I say to the Liberals that, if they are really acting in good faith, if they really want this bill to be passed quickly and properly, as my colleague was saying earlier, they should look at these issues in a more comprehensive and respectful way and find other arguments than those used by the previous speaker to reject the changes wanted by the people, the users and the Bloc Quebecois as well as by several members of the Reform Party who spoke to this bill. The government has an opportunity to show how open it is to valuable suggestions, and I hope that amendments 2, 3 and 4 will be supported by most of the members in this House.