Madam Speaker, I will be sharing my time with my colleague from South Shore.
I would take this opportunity to thank the people of my riding of Tobique—Mactaquac for electing me to represent them in Canada's House of Commons. I feel very humbled and honoured to be able to stand here today on behalf of the people of my riding.
Tobique—Mactaquac is a riding which stretches some 250 kilometres along the Saint John River Valley from Grand Falls to the outskirts of Fredericton, from Plaster Rock to Woodstock, from Bath to Stanley and all points in between. It includes some of the hardest working people in the country. I fully realize they would expect nothing less from their member of Parliament.
The people of Tobique—Mactaquac are a proud people. They are proud of their families, proud of their rural heritage and proud of their community. It is a privilege to sit in the House on their behalf. I will make every effort to represent them to the best of my ability.
This week we are celebrating National Business Week. It is sad the government only recognizes businesses one week out of the year. The other 51 weeks it is choking us to death in taxes.
In 1996 Canadian businesses shut down in record numbers. We have in New Brunswick the harmonized sales tax and a 15% federal tax. It is the government which introduced and put the bill into effect.
I am also a businessman. I own and operate a little convenience store and I sell gasoline. Before the HST came into effect I was selling on average 3,000 litres of gasoline per day. Now I sell on an average 300 litres a day. This is a drop of 90%. At the same time, before the HST came into effect, 80% to 85% of the people buying gas would come into the store to buy something else. My gross sales have now dropped by 40%. I have five employees in my little convenience store. Now I have one. Is this what the government calls job creation?
Today there are many Canadians who believe it is up to the government to create jobs. As a businessman I say it is not up to the government. Government cannot create jobs. It is up to us, the private sector and the business community, to create jobs. The government has a responsibility to help us create the climate and to create much needed jobs for Canadians.
The government could start by giving us a tax break that would help us create much needed jobs. A good way would be to cut the EI payroll tax, not from $2.90 per hundred to $2.80. Why does the government not bring it down to $2.20? Why have a $5 billion surplus in the EI fund when we could keep people to work?
When the government came to power we had a $42 billion deficit. I agree totally that this deficit had to come down and had to be eliminated. What I do not agree with is the way the government brought it down. It shoved its problems on to the provinces instead of cleaning its own mess in Ottawa. The only cut the government made wasted a lot of money.
What is more important to all Canadians is their health and education of their children. Yet the government cut those two items by $6 billion. What a shame to see the youth unemployment at 32% in New Brunswick. The government had a youth internship program but it was cancelled this summer. According to the Speech from the Throne the government will be putting more money toward our youth. I hope that some of that money will make its way to my riding of Tobique—Mactaquac because the people are hurting.
Government does not come first. The people we represent come first. I will be voting for the NDP motion because in my riding we believe in the same values and principles attached to it.