Mr. Speaker, my colleague said one thing that l agree with, and that is that he does not have his numbers right. In the interests of trying to assist my hon. colleague, I will clarify that from this recent bilateral trip to India, the Prime Minister and our members of caucus were able to secure two-way trade in the amount of $750 million. We can be proud of that. We were able to secure 6,000 jobs on Canadian soil. We should all be proud of that.
With regard to the tariff on chickpeas, as my hon. colleague knows that 95% of the chickpeas that are grown on Canadian soil will be exempt from the tariff. If my hon. colleague's party had a credible record on free trade, having never supported any real free trade deal of substance, he would know that. He would also know that the Prime Minister and this government are working very hard to secure an exemption from the steel tariff with our friends south of the border.
If he wants to move on, he should get his numbers right, and hopefully l have helped him to do that. Would he agree?