Mr. Speaker, I do not relish the opportunity to return to this debate, but it is important because it is about a thoroughly corrupt government hiding documents that would shed light and transparency on one of the biggest spending scandals in Canada's history. In fact, this green slush fund scandal, which has been laid at the feet of the Liberal government, is far bigger than the sponsorship scandal that cratered the Chrétien government.
This is important because it is about accountability. As my colleague from Toronto—St. Paul's said, it is about accountability, transparency and the responsible use of Canadians' hard-earned dollars, all of which have been wasted by the government and Liberal insiders, who are involved in graft and corruption.
Now, before I delve more deeply into this green slush fund scandal, I did want to chat very briefly and direct some comments to the residents of Abbotsford. This is a community that has supported me for 19 years. By the time I leave this chamber, it will be probably closer to 20 years. They have been very loyal to me. I have been able to win six elections. Each time they have trusted me to represent them with integrity in this House.
I have had the opportunity during that period of time to help shape Canada's trade policy with trade agreements like the European free trade agreement with Canada, and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, our trade agreement with South Korea. By the way, that also included negotiating Canada's free trade agreement with Ukraine. It is not a Liberal accomplishment. The original free trade agreement with Ukraine was negotiated under Stephen Harper.
Over those years, I was also able to deliver on a number of infrastructure priorities for my community, for example, the McCallum Road overpass, the Clearbrook Road overpass and the Mill Lake spray park. I was able to deliver on some social priorities, like the youth and gang crime prevention funding that keeps youth out of gangs and violent crime.
However, the biggest ask I have made of the government, and I ask members to take note of this, was that the government step up to the plate and help Abbotsford avoid future natural disasters. As members may recall, back in 2021, Abbotsford suffered through the worst natural disaster in British Columbia's history. The damage was in the billions of dollars. International trade was brought to a halt because goods could not come to and from the Vancouver port, because railways could not get their products to the port. Highway 1 one was completely severed. All this was because of a massive flood in the Abbotsford area on Sumas Prairie. Thousands of livestock drowned.
With billions of dollars of economic activity at stake and with lives at stake, one would think that the government would have stepped up and helped Abbotsford. In fact, what happened is the Prime Minister, as he is wont to do, showed up in Abbotsford. It was time for a photo op. He met with all the business leaders and the political leaders in Abbotsford, and said, “I have got your back.”
In fact, let me quote exactly what he said.
We'll be there for the clean up and the rebuilding after the impacts of these extreme weather events. It's really going to be important that Canadians continue to do what we do, which is being there for each other in this difficult situation and we will continue to be.
That is what the Prime Minister said to the residents of Abbotsford and some of the other flood-affected communities in British Columbia. He made a promise to deliver the help residents need to mitigate against future events like these.
More recently, the cities of Abbotsford and Merritt and the Town of Princeton all put in applications for the government to step up to the plate and do what the Prime Minister had promised he would do and deliver the kind of funding required to be able to build diking and pumping infrastructure that would prevent these kinds of events from happening again. The government said no. For anyone watching in Canada, especially the residents of Abbotsford, they must understand that the City of Abbotsford made an application to the federal government for funding to replace and enhance the Barrowtown Pump Station, provide additional diking and strengthen existing dikes so that a massive flood event would not happen again. The Prime Minister said no.
In case any of my Liberal colleagues over there suggest that this promise was never made, more recently, one of the members of the government approached me in a moment of candidness and said, “Ed, we really failed Abbotsford. I am so sorry. We promised to deliver support and we did not.” That is at the feet of the Liberal government. It is only one in a host of scandals that have surrounded the Prime Minister and his corrupt, unethical government.
That is only the tip of the iceberg. Today we are talking about the green slush fund scandal. I want to explain a bit about what that scandal entails. There is an organization called Sustainable Development Technology Canada, which was created to support small and medium-sized businesses that had innovations in the green technology space that would help Canadians become more technologically advanced and environmentally sustainable. There is merit in that. We all want to do our part for the environment. The Prime Minister asked this organization to create a new fund, let us call it the billion-dollar fund, to help young entrepreneurs and small and medium-sized businesses to perhaps expand markets, do further research, develop their products, market their products in a way that Canada could find a way of leveraging our strengths and educational expertise to deliver value for Canadians and at the same time respond to the emergent environmental challenges that our world faces.
Instead of doing what was right, which was to evaluate each application to the green slush fund on its merits, something quite different happened. The Prime Minister appointed a board to administer, evaluate and assess these applications. The directors of the board, who have a fiduciary duty, not only to SDTC, but to the taxpayers of Canada, instead of evaluating these projects on their merits and declaring conflicts of interest when they arose, enriched themselves by awarding these monies to themselves through their own companies.
Remember, this is a government organization that is supposed to administer taxpayer money. It is basically holding this money in trust for taxpayers to make sure that Canadians get value for that money.
Instead of the directors doing their job and discharging their fiduciary duty, they said that they had companies and that they would love to skim millions of dollars off the top to give to their own companies, which would benefit because that would increase profits in the companies. The directors would get dividends and become rich as a result. That is exactly what those directors did. They stole money from taxpayers and funnelled it to their own companies. By any account or standard, that is a scandal. It is corruption and graft of the highest order.
As I said when I spoke earlier, I fully expect that people are going to go to jail as a result of this scandal. Will it be members of this House of Commons who go to jail as a result, or members of the cabinet? We do not know. Will Liberal insiders go to jail as a result of this? We do not know.