Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to continue the debate that was interrupted by question period and the proceedings since that time. I have largely covered the issue regarding the surplus in the plan at this point in time.
Other major issues in the bill include the splitting of the CPP from pension plan contributions. As we know, employees of the civil service are the only employees in the country who have been making a combined CPP-pension plan payment. Now that the government has decided to increase CPP contributions dramatically over the next number of years it has split that out so that employees will have to pay the same CPP increases that everybody else is going to have to pay and perhaps pay more into the pension plan as well, if that is warranted at a later date.
The intention is to privatize the fund over the next number of years so that as new contributions are made, starting April 1, they will go into a new plan. Benefits will be paid out of the old plan, but new money will not go into the old plan, so when the old plan is broke and finished and fully disbursed, by that time it will be fully privatized. It is complex stuff that shows the length the government is prepared to go to try to get its way.
One of the other things the government does is to redefine terms in the dictionary. I am looking at page 51 of the bill under “persons considered to be married”. I find this rather interesting. It states:
For the purposes of this Part, when a contributor dies and, at the time of death, the contributor was married to a person with whom the contributor had been cohabiting in a relationship of a conjugal nature for a period immediately before the marriage, that person is considered to have become married to the contributor on the day established as being the day on which the cohabitation began.
Therefore, the marriage ceremony is irrelevant. The government has redefined the definition of the term marriage. As soon as one enters into a cohabitation arrangement, by the government's definition, one is married, regardless of what the dictionary says.
I will leave that point for Canadians to contemplate. As many people are concerned about the changes taking place in our society today, we now have the government leading the way in redefining the very simple word “marriage”, which I think for generations has meant a ceremony in which people commit themselves to each other.
Then we have the other issue of it not only being people of the opposite sex but people of the same sex. The government has run into a real conundrum in trying to define a defined relationship, while at the same time leaving it open for virtually any kind of relationship to apply. I could not put on the record the complex terminology that government members have had to use in trying to say that the door is shut and open at the same time. As we can see, they have had to go through contortions to define that. That debate will continue on another day.
As I said at the beginning of my remarks, I think it is dreadful that a 200 page bill with complex legal language, dealing with issues as complex as actuarial assessments of pension plans, who benefits and who does not, who pays and who does not, who shares in the risk and who does not, and so on, should all be wrapped up in less than two days of debate because the government has introduced closure. That is an affront to the democratic process. I would hope that members opposite would hang their heads in shame for having trampled the rights of members of the House who have a right to speak on issues before the House, to express the wishes of their constituents and to express their own opinions on the issue.
We have a 200 page bill and the government says after a few hours of debate “That is enough. Thank you very much. We will move it to committee”. We will no doubt have closure at committee. We will likely be refused to hear any witnesses. Government members will say that the job is done and that it should be brought back to the House. I can see closure being moved at third reading. That is how arrogant the government has become.
I hope that Canadians start to take this point seriously and start calling Liberal members of parliament to ask why they are doing this. Why are they putting a muzzle on parliament? Surely if free speech means anything it means free speech in this place. We do not have free speech. We do not even have the right to speak any more because of closure. It is a dreadful day for Canadians.