Mr. Speaker, the member opposite gave a very long speech. I actually thought it was a budget speech in some parts, because she kept talking more about what the government has done rather than about the government intervening in the course of justice.
It seems to me that the Liberal government has lost its moral compass, and it seems that many members are playing alongside. Men and women have fought and died for our Canadian way of life. They fought for democracy, and they fought for justice and the rule of law. They did not fight for jobs.
I would say to the government that if the thinking is that it is all about jobs, it is a moral hazard, because eventually, we are going to say which jobs. What signal is that sending to corporate Canada? It is saying that if they are big enough, they can do things that are wrong that contravene our international conventions, such as bribery of foreign officials and sex trafficking within this country. There is so much wrong with that.
The member has said in this place that it is okay, Canadians. We did it because we want to preserve those jobs. What is next? What signal does that send to Canadians? What signal does that send to our children? A government has to be grounded in values, and I am afraid that the government has lost all moral authority and that the member has lost her way. I hope she can find it again.