Mr. Speaker, any tax agreement is only as good as the enforcement provisions that are contained within it, as members know. Now we have a situation in which it appears that the Minister of National Revenue actually refused data on hundreds of Canadians who were hiding money overseas. The information was offered to the current government on a silver platter. The information was being provided to the government, and the government, unlike other, deeper-thinking governments, refused to take that information.
Given how lamentably bad the Conservative government's record is on the level of tax debt climbing by 57%, the doubling of the amount, the tens of billions of dollars invested in tax havens overseas with the government basically rubber-stamping that, and then the Minister of National Revenue refusing to take information on the hundreds of Canadians hiding money overseas, how does the member think the current government has any credibility whatsoever when it comes to the issue of tax fairness?