Madam Speaker, I appreciate the question from my hon. colleague. He always asks very intelligent questions.
In this situation, with the former finance minister, now the current Prime Minister, we see a pattern. Look at how Canadians have valued the finance minister. Some people used to say that he balanced the budget and gave him credit for that.
However, let us see how he balanced the budget. He stole $45 million from the EI fund, which did not belong to him or his government, and put it into the government revenues. This money belonged to the employers and employees.
If we look at a different example, the Prime Minister once promised to eliminate all tax havens. When he acted on that promise, he conveniently forgot to include Barbados, which permitted CSL to register its ships there and save, by one estimate, about $103 million in Canadian taxes. Convenient indeed. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister's companies received millions of dollars from the government in contracts.
There are many examples that can be related to the pattern that has developed where the former finance minister, now the Prime Minister, has demonstrated that his character, his personality, his thinking, his actions and his talk do not match the ethical leader to which Canadians were looking forward.
I am sure Canadians will be careful not to vote for a corrupt, weak and arrogant Liberal government and its leader.