Madam Speaker, it is unfortunate I have to rise to speak to this issue. This could have ended days ago had the Liberal government capitulated and shown the documents. It is obviously very frightened to show Canadians the level of scandal that is in those documents.
What we as parliamentarians are now facing is a Parliament, a House of Commons and a government in complete crisis. The lengths that the Prime Minister and his office will go to cover up this latest scandal is incredible. To basically shut down Parliament and not have any government business happening just to protect their own hide is very disingenuous to the members who are here, as we represent our constituents, and certainly to every Canadian who expects better from their government.
All parliamentarians represent those constituents who elected us, those families in our ridings who put their trust in us to represent them here. It is their privilege that we are demanding be honoured. The Speaker has ruled that the Liberal government should be handing over the documents, to show that Canadians can make that decision for themselves and determine accountability if there is a scandal. It certainly seems the whistle-blowers and others have highlighted $400 million in misappropriated taxpayer funds. Canadians have the right to see those documents. Canadians, who elected us to be here, have the right to make that determination.
What is at stake here is accountability in the House of Commons, where transparency and trust for all of us should be paramount, not just for the government in power. It is wielding that power as a sledgehammer over the House of Commons and over Canadians. I think we all would agree that oversight and transparency in Parliament are paramount to ensure that the trust of Canadians in what we do here is upheld. I certainly do not think that is happening right now, as the Prime Minister and the Prime Minister's Office are refusing to comply with a decision by the Speaker to produce those documents. The government is doing everything it can to hide that from Canadians.
This comes at a time when Canadians are frustrated. They are angry. They are struggling to make ends meet every single day. More than two million Canadians are visiting a food bank in a single month. Food insecurity in Canada is up 111%. Food inflation in Canada is 36% higher than it is in the United States. While Canadians are struggling, the Prime Minister and the Liberal-NDP government are taking Canadians' tax dollars and lining the pockets of their friends and insiders. We have hundreds, if not thousands, of homeless encampments popping up all across Canada. In Alberta, food bank use is up more than 35%. I have heard similar stories right across Canada. We saw a report the other day from Mississauga where food bank use was up 60%.
While Canadians are struggling just to put food on the table, the Liberal government is lining its pockets and the pockets of its friends with the dollars of Canadian taxpayers. The level of this scandal is something many of us have never seen before in Canada. The RCMP commissioner has confirmed that the Prime Minister's hand-picked directors in what we call the green slush fund are already under criminal investigation. Nine green slush fund board appointees have been implicated in funnelling this $400 million to their own companies. The chair of the green slush fund board was hand-picked by the Prime Minister even though he was warned multiple times of a conflict of interest. Once again, the Prime Minister got his own way and did not care about a conflict of interest or the integrity of his government.
The Prime Minister's hand-picked board of directors was funnelling $400 million of taxpayer money to their own companies. That is unbelievable. It did not happen a couple of times; it happened more than 180 times. There was a blatant disregard for conflicts of interest, ethics, integrity and the sanctity of taxpayer dollars. It is one thing, maybe, to do something once or twice, like, “Okay, we made a mistake,” but to say, “Oh, we did it once or twice and we got away with it. Let us just keep going and see how far we can get with this,” and then do it more than 180 times is just unreal.
What we have now is the Liberal government, not only defying an order of this House to produce those required documents and turn them over to the RCMP but now obstructing justice by refusing to co-operate with that RCMP investigation. The Liberals are deliberately trying to distract and delay by wanting to send this to committee, wasting more time and more energy instead of giving Canadians the transparency they deserve right now by tabling those documents.
As I said when I spoke to this previously, when my home is robbed, I call the police. I do not ask my neighbours to get together and form a committee to discuss that robbery. That is what Canadians are asking for. The Liberals have robbed Canadians of their tax dollars, and Canadians are asking to call the police for an investigation into the misappropriation and mishandling of their tax dollars. The scale of this corruption is just disgusting, and Canadians are certainly outraged about how the Liberals are taking advantage of their position yet again. It is a story we have heard over and over from the current Liberal government, in particular, of enriching Liberals' friends and the government's insiders.
This Prime Minister has taken scandals, conflicts of interest and abuse of taxpayer money to new heights like no prime minister before. Insiders, bureaucrats and special interest groups have become fabulously wealthy under the current Liberal government, while Canadians are struggling every single day just to put food on the table, put fuel in their car, heat their homes and try to buy that first home. There has been $54 million for arrive scam, $237 million to a former Liberal MP for unused ventilators, $150 million to SNC-Lavalin for unused field hospitals and $12 million for Loblaws to buy new fridges and freezers despite record profits for that retailer.
I am not given enough time to go through every single scandal that the Liberals have endured in their nine years in government. However, I think my colleagues would really like to hear some of the greatest hits. This would make a best-selling K-TEL album. I may be dating myself with K-TEL, but Hit Express was one of the best ones ever, so I am going to give my colleagues my version of Hit Express.
First, we had the Aga Khan scandal. Canada's Ethics Commissioner ruled that the Prime Minister had indeed broken the conflict of interest rules, accepting vacations and gifts and flights from the Aga Khan in 2016. It was the first time in our history that a prime minister had been found to have committed such a transgression. He is the only Prime Minister to be found guilty of fraud and the Prime Minister gave himself consent to break that law that is in the Criminal Code.
Now, we will move to the SNC-Lavalin affair. Former justice minister, Jody Wilson-Raybould, accused her own government and its officials of inappropriately pressuring her to make a decision on the SNC-Lavalin affair to avoid a corruption trial. That affair led to the resignation of the Prime Minister's top aide, Gerald Butts; the minister herself, Ms. Wilson-Raybould; and Michael Wernick, the head of the federal bureaucracy at that time. Former public works minister, Jane Philpott, quit, citing her loss of confidence in the Prime Minister, and that the Prime Minister did indeed politically interfere with his own justice minister to try and save his friends at SNC-Lavalin.
Then, once again, when Canadians were at their most anxious and most stressed in the midst of a pandemic, the Prime Minister found yet another opportunity to try to enrich his friends. When Canadians were struggling, businesses were closing and kids were not in school, the Prime Minister, instead of helping Canadians, found a way to help his friends with the WE Charity scandal, which had previously paid nearly half a million dollars to his close family friends to appear at their events, despite claims to the contrary. However, the Liberals continued to double down with WE, trying to give the charity tens of millions of Canadian taxpayer dollars to run some programs through the pandemic. The Liberals defied the order once again in Parliament and blocked key players at WE from testifying at the ethics committee.
We will go back a bit further to an illegal casino magnate. I don't want people to forget about these, so I want to bring back some blasts from the past. In 2016 and 2017, the Prime Minister participated in fundraising events in Toronto and Vancouver that featured wealthy entrepreneurs. The architect of a heavily armed illegal casino operation in Markham twice had FaceTime calls with the Prime Minister and, surprise, he also has ties to the Chinese Communist Party. Also at those meetings was a Chinese billionaire and member of the Chinese people consultative conference, who made a $1-million donation to the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, which was reported in The Globe and Mail.
In 2016, one of several additional scandals, all the way back when one of the Prime Minister's first scandals with a newly elected government, surrounded his attendance in the United States at pay-for-play fundraisers featuring billionaires with connections to the communist regime in China. Perhaps the most concerning is that the Liberal government openly ignored warnings from the House of Commons about attempts by communist Beijing to swing the results of two federal by-elections.
In early 2023, most of the board of directors resigned from the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation in light of a $200,000 donation from political strategists and a billionaire with connections, once again, to the Communist regime in China. The foundation misled Canadians when it said the controversial donation made by two Chinese businessmen qualified as a Canadian donation. However, not surprisingly, emails revealed that the foundation corresponded with the China Cultural Industry Association, an arm of the Communist Party in Beijing. They contain the name that should be listed on the tax receipts for the donation, and where they were to be sent.
I do not know who does the oversight with the Liberal government; perhaps there is no oversight; that is obvious with the number of scandals there have been, including the one involving Jaspal Atwal. Photographs surfaced of Mr. Atwal posing with Canadian officials, and he obtained a travel visa and secured invitations to formal events with the Prime Minister on the official tour to India.
The Liberal research bureau, a taxpayer-funded office, paid $75,000 in public funds to Data Sciences, a company owned by Tom Pitfield, a Liberal strategist who ran the last two digital election campaigns for the Prime Minister and who is a childhood friend of the Prime Minister.
Who could forget the arrive scam app? It is just another case of the government's spending way more money on something that would have taken a reasonable amount of time and a reasonable amount of money to develop. However, for the glitchy, often-criticized mobile app that was an absolute disaster and mandatory for Canadians during COVID-19, the initial budget was $80,000.
The app ended up costing, from what we know, and it could be way more, at least $60 million. The ridiculous thing is that the company that was asked to build the app, GC Strategies, had only two employees and did no IT service whatsoever, yet when the bills kept coming in to the government, and the bill kept getting higher and higher, no one said a thing. The government just kept paying the bills.
I am sure the folks at GC Strategies wondered how far they could push it, how many times they could go to the well before they got their fingers tapped a little bit. Apparently they could go 60 million times before anyone within the Liberal government and the bureaucracy said, “We started at $80,000; we are now at $60 million. Did we miss a zero somewhere, or is this legitimate?” Obviously it was not legitimate. Canadians still have not gotten their money back.
That was a regular occurrence with the government, as cabinet ministers have handed out sole-source contracts to friends and family. The international trade minister spent $20,000 in media training for a close friend and staffer inside the office of the housing minister, who also paid $93,000 in constituency funds to his sister.
Liberals also awarded nearly $100 million in contracts to their good friends at McKinsey & Company, flouting procurement rules along the way. The report sparked serious concerns about cronyism in the government's outsourcing of its contracts. McKinsey management has long-standing and deep ties to the Liberal government.
McKinsey employed Dominic Barton as its global managing director from 2009 until his appointment as ambassador to China in 2019. Of 28 competitive bids, six appear to have been designed specifically with McKinsey in mind, based on the job description. This was a way for the Liberals to justify awarding the contracts to McKinsey. They had sourced them through Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, which was also concerned about McKinsey's growing influence on their policy, without any public knowledge.
When the Liberals named the Ethics Commissioner's interim successor, they went with Martine Richard. She was a veteran lawyer in the commissioner's office, but she also happened to be the sister-in-law of the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs.
We now have the story of two Randys. There is a minister from Alberta. I honestly do not know how the minister goes back to his riding in Edmonton, looks his constituents in the face and says there are two Randys, but he is not the Randy they are looking for. We know he is misleading his constituents and Canadians.
There are not two Randys. The emails prove it. I would implore the Liberal minister from Edmonton to just come clean. It was his own company. He was still a shareholder and still had decision-making power when the company was getting government contracts during the pandemic. I hope he goes home to his riding and comes clean with his own constituents.
We now have Tom Clark. The Liberal-NDP government decided to purchase a $9-million luxury condo on Billionaires' Row in New York. Just this week, Politico reported that Tom Clark was encouraging the government to purchase this new condo because his living standards in Manhattan were just unlivable. He first said he knew nothing about this purchase. I cannot imagine the squalor that Tom Clark was living with in Manhattan, when we have 1,400 homeless encampments just in Ontario.
Worse still, the decision to purchase this condo was only made after the Prime Minister visited Tom Clark in New York City; soon after, Global Affairs Canada decided to make this purchase on Billionaires' Row. Clearly, the Prime Minister takes very good care of his friends in their times of need, with an unlimited credit card backed by the taxpayer.
We had the clam scam. A number of these scandals have occurred.
We now have a new one that I am not even sure many of my colleagues are aware of. The CRA was duped out of $40 million. In the summer of 2023, a Canadian taxpayer logged on to his CRA account and falsely amended his tax returns; the CRA paid out $40 million in fake tax returns. The worst part is that it was not the CRA that made the discovery that it was inadvertently paying out $40 million. It was CIBC, the taxpayer's bank, that raised the alarm. It was odd that this one person was getting $40 million from the CRA. How lax are the accountability and the metrics within the government if $40 million just goes missing without anybody blinking an eye?
I wish I could say all this is surprising, but it just seems to be a regular occurrence with the government. We go on and on with these scandals. The truth is that these are not oversights or missteps. This is a habit. When we have a couple of mistakes, I think we can overlook them somewhat, but this is now tens of millions of dollars of taxpayer money. The Liberals are lining the pockets of their friends, Liberal insiders and people within the party.
Canadians have simply had enough. Canadians deserve to see the documents that show exactly how deep this rot goes. The Liberal government is blocking the transparency that Canadians deserve and that all members in the House, who were elected to represent our constituents, also deserve. I would encourage the Liberal government to honour the privilege of the House because that is the privilege of every single Canadian who sent us here.