Mr. Speaker, I was listening to the member and I want to remind her what we have done for women. For example, INAC has begun the process to address matrimonial property rights for aboriginal women. We have increased funding to on reserve family violence shelters by $6 million.
We can look at justice. We have had tougher legislation to deal with sexual predators, repeat offenders and conditional sentencing. We raised the age of protection.
With regard to immigration, we are protecting victims of human trafficking with temporary visas, treating them as victims rather than criminals.
When she talks about the literacy funding being cut, we increased funding by $307 million for immigrant settlement services. We also have $6 million allocated for the protection of sexually exploited children.
If we want to talk about health: vaccines for cervical cancer, wait times for prenatal aboriginal women, $120 million for the global fight against AIDS, and $7 million annual funding for the family violence initiative.
If we want to talk about human resources, we have the universal child care benefit. There is $5.6 billion a year going into early learning and child care. That is twice what her party had ever given toward early learning and child care.
We had the new pilot training program in New Brunswick for women in non-traditional work. We made it easier for senior women to claim guaranteed income supplement benefits. We have a women in trades project in Edmonton. We have textbook tax credits for university women. We have older workers pilot project initiatives. We gave an additional $20 million to Status of Women, which is the highest budget ever. She sits on that particular committee, so she knows that.
With regard to international cooperation, there is $45 million over five years to UNICEF which will provide medical treatment to children and mothers in Bangladesh. We could talk about--