Mr. Speaker, I realize that the leader of the Conservative Party was a member of the inner circle for Stephen Harper when he was a minister and a parliamentary secretary. When the Conservatives talk about corruption, I could talk about the anti-terrorism corruption of $3.1 billion; the Phoenix scandal of $2.2 billion; the G8 spending scandal; the ETS scandal; the F-35 scandal; the Senate scandal; the election scandals and the cuts to the Auditor General for foreign interference, which is a long one. Those are not to mention another booklet of 70 other types of scandals the leader of the Conservative Party was involved in with the government of Stephen Harper.
My question is more related to an image that the Conservatives are trying to portray to Canadians, that Canada is broken, which is not the case. Canada is the best country in the world to call home. When we compare Canada to the rest of the world, we will find that our interest rates are down, that our inflation is down and that there have been twice as many jobs created under the Liberal government as there were under the Harper government when the leader of the Conservative Party sat at the cabinet table. We have the most significant number of trade agreements ever signed in the history of our nation. We have a school food program. We have pharmacare. There have been a lot of proactive things.
Does the member opposite seriously believe that Canada is broken?