I would remind members today that we are debating a Reform motion which reads:
That this House condemn the government for making their 50/50 election promise on any future surpluses without adequate public debate as to the optimal size of government, taxes and debt, thus threatening to repeat Canada's 27 year old history of irresponsible spending, creating high debt, financed by high taxes, causing high unemployment.
It is not difficult to see the reasons why we would propose such a motion in the House. There is plenty of evidence out there among ordinary average Canadian taxpayers that they are very dissatisfied with any suggestion that government would increase its spending at this point in the cycle.
The Financial Post did a poll of Canadian CEOs and average taxpayers in September. This poll was published in the Financial Post on September 27. I can give members a couple of examples from this poll.
Peggy Witte of Royal Oak Mines stated in answer to questions that Royal Oak Mines left Canada because of the high Canadian taxes which made it difficult to attract top-notch talent to fill positions in the company within Canada. I know that Peggy Witte's company, Royal Oak Mines, is certainly not the only one that has deserted our province because of high taxes.
Where I live in Vancouver, we are very close to the United States border. There are something like 30,000 Canadians who have business interests just across the border in Bellingham and Blaine. Many thousands of Canadians go to work every day just across the border because there is a lower tax climate there both at the corporate and personal levels.
It was not just CEOs though who responded to the poll and indicated that they were dissatisfied with tax levels. Among average taxpayers, a vast majority favoured tax reductions and by 28:1 they favoured cuts in personal income taxes. It is not difficult to see why they would favour cuts in personal income taxes when we look at an article that was printed in the Vancouver Sun on September 18 and sent to me by a constituent.
The article shows Canadian household savings are on the decline. Canadians are saving much less than ever before and mainly because since 1980 the government's share of personal income has gone from 17 percent to over 25 percent. The government has increased its take from personal incomes by 8 percent just since 1980. As a result, people have far less savings. In fact the graphs, which I cannot show to members, show that personal savings have dropped dramatically as taxes have increased dramatically since the early 1980s. At this point the savings rate is running at about 1 percent. That is a full 9 percent lower than it was just a decade ago.
Of course income taxes as we know were supposed to be a temporary tax. I mentioned to members yesterday that I had a folder full of things that constituents had sent to me over the summer that they would surely hear about as we went on through the business of this House.
There is another clipping here sent by a constituent who wanted me to remember that September 20 marked the 80th anniversary of the birth of the income tax in Canada. It preceded today's income tax. It received royal assent on September 20, 1917. It was supposed to be a temporary measure which would be reversed once the war was over. I think we are still in a bit of a war but now it is to try to battle back those who want to spend other people's money. They certainly throw it around very freely.
Mr. Trevor Roote in my riding was a bit outraged when bureaucrats at the GST collection department said that they were losing revenue because of the exemptions for groceries, drugs and medical devices. He really objects to the way that bureaucrats say they are losing tax revenues because of exemptions. He said that it was only through the permission of the people that they can have these tax revenues.
Really, it is quite outrageous that the government treats this as if it were a business income to which it has a right for some sort of service that it provides. I realize there are many services that the government provides which we all agree are necessary and essential but there is a tremendous amount of government waste. Some of it was mentioned today during question period.
I am sure many members have seen the headline on the front page of an edition of the Hill Times : “Pork barrel politics: Bagmen, old college buddies and riding association presidents all benefited from Liberal largesse collecting plum government appointments last month”.
There were some examples: Gilles Champagne will sit as a member of the Canada Post board of governors. The three-year appointment which was approved by cabinet on September 24 pays a $600 per diem and a $7,000 annual retainer. The Liberal Party director in Quebec knows Mr. Champagne from their fundraising work together and he described him as a good Liberal.
The Liberals for example made another appointment in the heart of Bloc Quebecois country. Mr. Frappier, who is the son of a Liberal appointed judge, was given a plum position there.
Bryan Williams, a lawyer in the Vancouver area, a long time Liberal supporter, was named chief justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia last month.
There are a whole slew of examples even in the Hill Times and many of these examples find their way into the mainstream press. We read about them regularly.
I think some of us will remember members who were not re-elected to this House. Geoff Regan, whom I remember, represented Halifax West. I mentioned to him at one time that his failure to represent his constituents on an issue would probably come back to haunt him. I see now though that not satisfied with the taxpayers' decision to throw Mr. Regan out of office, the government has appointed him senior assistant in the federal ministerial regional office located in Halifax, the executive suite where the ministers go to powder their noses. Mr. Regan landed on his feet.
Of course we remember Mary Clancy and how many times in this House she criticized the United States, how she slammed the Americans. And where is she now? She is in Boston in a patronage position at the embassy. Imagine Mary Clancy as an ambassador for Canada. Can you imagine that? The person who condemned the United States constantly.
That is one area of waste, but there are many others such as the federal-provincial infrastructure program of course, which Reform criticized because much of it went to pork barrel politics.
There are the results of a questionnaire that was sent out to all members of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business a couple of months ago asking whether there should be a renewed federal-provincial infrastructure program. Of those who replied Canada wide 49 percent said no. These are business people answering these questions about the way tax dollars should be spent. Forty-nine per cent Canada wide and fifty-six per cent in B.C. said “Don't use our tax dollars on these pork barrel federal-provincial arrangements”.
When we think about it, what a silly way to raise taxes for local infrastructure. We tax workers in B.C., transfer their money to Ottawa where it gets shuffled around by the bureaucrats and then it gets dumped into a program for infrastructure and gets sent back to B.C. again where it gets shuffled around and handed out under the grants program.
We probably if we are lucky get back 50 cents on every dollar to actually spend on the infrastructure. It would have been better for the local government body closest to the taxpayer to be responsible for collecting that money in the first place and spending it on the infrastructure directly.
Then the minister for multiculturalism today in question period said how carefully she screens the grants to multiculturalism groups and how they never waste any money.
There was an example in British Columbia which I wish I could have brought up for the minister at the time, the Canadian Association to Fight Racism, which of course has a wonderfully politically correct name. No one would ever dare suggest that maybe it is doing something wrong.
That organization had failed to file its papers with Victoria for three years in a row. It got struck off the register. It was still collecting money from the minister of multiculturalism when it had no mandate and no legal authority to exist.
These are the sorts of things that go on constantly with our taxpayers' money. I could go on. I have a big stack of stuff here that I could go through for all these examples of waste, one which all the members in this House would have got about a week ago.
There is another survey from Ms. Tremblay which she does every parliamentary session, $41,000 down the drain again, asking us whether we think there should be more women in Parliament and what we should do to arrange that. It is the voters who decide who will be in Parliament, not us. What a waste of money.
I wish I could spend a half a day talking about this absolute pile of waste, but I know that members opposite are bursting to ask me questions.