Mr. Speaker, to say that I, my colleagues and opposition members in the House have been thrown a curveball would be an understatement. I had originally thought that I would be talking for the third time about the green slush fund and the various amendments to the motion brought before the House, trying to impress upon my Liberal colleagues, for one last time in this calendar year, why they should finally relent and release the unredacted documents so that we can get back to the business that the people here in Canada elected us to do. However, to my colleague from St. Albert—Edmonton, we are definitely in uncharted waters. It is historic, it is unprecedented and it deserves the attention of my intervention today.
However, before I do that, I want to start on a happy note. As I indicated, this is my last official speech intervention in the House for 2024. I want to take the opportunity to wish the Speaker and his family a very merry Christmas and a very prosperous new year. I wish all the chair occupants, individually, as well as all of our fine clerks, our House staff, our pages and my colleagues, a very merry Christmas and a happy new year. I wish for them time to reflect and have a relaxing time with their families in their ridings. I offer the same greetings to all my opposition colleagues and to members of the government, as well as to the Liberal caucus. We all play a pivotal role here in the exercise of democracy, but it is important to take a step back and thank those who assist us in that process.
However, getting back to the reality of the situation, I know some of my colleagues have read out various excerpts of the deputy prime minister's official letter of resignation, but I want to take the time to actually read it out and to reflect upon it for a moment. This is dated with today's date:
Dear Prime Minister,
It has been the honour of my life to serve in government, working for Canada and Canadians. We have accomplished a lot together.
On Friday, you told me you no longer want me to serve as your Finance Minister and offered me another position in the Cabinet.
Upon reflection, I have concluded that the only honest and viable path is for me to resign from the Cabinet.
To be effective, a Minister must speak on behalf of the Prime Minister and with his full confidence. In making your decision, you made clear that I no longer credibly enjoy that confidence and possess the authority that comes with it.
For the past number of weeks, you and I have found ourselves at odds about the best path forward for Canada.
Our country today faces a grave challenge. The incoming administration in the United States is pursuing a policy of aggressive economic nationalism, including a threat of 25 per cent tariffs.
We need to take that threat extremely seriously. That means keeping our fiscal powder dry today, so we have the reserves we may need for a coming tariff war. That means eschewing costly political gimmicks, which we can ill afford and which make Canadians doubt that we recognize the gravity of the moment.
That means pushing back against ‘America First’ economic nationalism with a determined effort to fight for capital and investment and the jobs they bring. That means working in good faith and humility with the Premiers of the provinces and territories of our great and diverse country, and building a true Team Canada response.
I know Canadians would recognize and respect such an approach. They know when we are working for them, and they equally know when we are focused on ourselves. Inevitably, our time in government will come to an end. But how we deal with the threat our country currently faces will define us for a generation, and perhaps longer. Canada will win if we are strong, smart, and united.
It is this conviction which has driven my strenuous efforts this fall to manage our spending in ways that will give us the flexibility we will need to meet the serious challenges presented by the United States.
I will always be grateful for the chance to have served in government and I will always be proud of our government's work for Canada and Canadians.
I look forward to continuing to work with my colleagues as a Liberal Member of Parliament, and I am committed to running again for my seat in Toronto in the next federal election.
With gratitude,
The [Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance]
The letter simply validates the rumours that have been circulating for weeks, if not for months, that the Prime Minister was at odds with his Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance in terms of the governance of this particular country and how we are going to achieve that by way of economic policies. It confirms what we have always believed, all along, in this particular Prime Minister, which is that his self-proclaimed credentials of being a proud feminist were always fake. It is all about gimmicks; it is all about virtue signalling.
I have lost track of how many strong, effective women have been elected as Liberal members of Parliament and have gone on to be appointed to very senior roles in government. Jody Wilson-Raybould is one example. I was proud of the fact that, at the time of her election and appointment as Canada's first female indigenous justice minister and attorney general, I was in the ranks at that point, provincially, as a Crown attorney. I know that she did her best. She put her heart into that job, and she stood by principles, which have governed lawyers upon their call to a particular bar, of integrity, of knowledge, of confidence.
The ordeal of the SNC-Lavalin affair highlighted the integrity and the confidence that Jody Wilson-Raybould maintained in that particular role, because she was not going to be bullied, which is the appropriate term for the actions of the Prime Minister. She was bullied, threatened and intimidated to make a decision that not only compromised her role as the attorney general, but also compromised her sense of right and wrong, her integrity and her ethics. She refused to carry the water for the Prime Minister to ensure a sweetheart deal for a Quebec-based company under the proviso of terms, which turned out to be completely false, as advanced by the Prime Minister and by the Liberal government. She said no. She spoke her words: “truth to power”.
She will forever be remembered for the courage that she displayed, but that courage, which should be lauded, should be encouraged and should be supported by a true leader of a G7 country, was dismissed so summarily by this fake feminist. The Prime Minister has let down women across this country, time after time. He turned an event a couple of weeks ago into a partisan event at Equal Voice here in Ottawa. He used it as an opportunity to, again, criticize the same country he is trying to work with and trying to avoid a 25% tariff. He takes it as an opportunity to lament the fact that Americans, twice now, did not elect a female president. That is not how to negotiate.
It is no small wonder that, in the newspaper, I think today's or yesterday's Toronto Sun, there was Brian Lilley's headline: “Lilley: Premiers are stepping up to do the job Trudeau won't”. They are taking active steps to deal with the border issues—