Mr. Speaker, it is getting worse every single day. In Ontario alone, over 17,000 young people lost their jobs just last month. Ontario's unemployment has now topped 700,000, up 83,000 in a single year. In Windsor, unemployment has soared past 10%. In Toronto, joblessness is up 46,000 year over year, a record high. This past summer, it was the worst in a generation, with returning full-time students facing an average unemployment rate of 17.9%, the highest since the great recession, outside the pandemic. This is not just a crisis. It is a generational collapse.
I will be splitting my time with another member.
Young Canadians trying to pay tuition, gain experience and start their lives have been completely abandoned by the Liberal government. Even educated workers, those who did everything right, who went to school, studied hard and followed the rules, are struggling. One in six workers with post-secondary credentials is in a job unrelated to their training. New graduates are unable to build careers in their fields. I ask the Liberal government how it can call it opportunity when no opportunity even exists.
How can a young person believe in the Canadian promise when the path to success has been blocked by Liberal red tape, reckless spending and endless taxes? This is not a temporary setback. This is a metastasizing crisis that threatens Canada's long-term economic future. A government that loses faith in its young people is a government that loses faith in Canada.
What caused this crisis? It was the Liberal Prime Minister and his decision to double down on the very same Trudeau-era policies that failed. It begins with their disastrous economic policy, a policy that drives away investment, kills small businesses and punishes personal ambition. For 10 years, the Liberals have pushed anti-growth laws that sabotage the very sectors that built the country: energy, manufacturing, resource development and more. They refuse to repeal their “no new pipelines” law, the same law that killed billions in private investment and forced companies to flee south. They maintain the production cap, which throttles Canada's ability to compete globally. They enforce a tanker ban that effectively blocks our provinces from exporting responsibly produced Canadian energy while our allies depend on the exports of dirty dictator oil.
Is that fair to young Canadians who could be building careers in engineering, trades or innovation, or is that just failure dressed up as virtue?
Investment is fleeing the country at a record level. Business investment for workers collapsed by more than 10% per worker under the Liberals' watch. Canada now ranks dead last in the G7 for GDP growth, experiencing negative growth and the fastest-shrinking economy as measured by real GDP per capita.
What does the Liberal Prime Minister tell Canadians? He says that we need to sacrifice. What do we need to sacrifice exactly? Is it our prosperity, our jobs, our expectations, our standards or our hope?
Let us remember what these numbers mean. Behind every statistic is a story, a young person whose dream has been delayed or destroyed, a recent graduate in Toronto forced to move back in with their parents because rent costs more than their entire paycheque, a student in Windsor who is working two part-time jobs just to cover groceries but is still unable to find meaningful summer employment in their field or a young couple in Richmond Hill who gave up on ever owning a home and starting a family because the down payment they saved up five years ago is now worth much less. This is the reality for millions. Is this the Canada our parents and grandparents built? Is this the country that once promised that hard work would be rewarded, not punished by Liberal policies?
Conservatives have a plan, not more words such as the Liberals like to use, but real action. There is an opportunity to work with Conservatives on a youth jobs plan that is built on four key pillars to restore opportunity and rebuild hope.
First, we will unleash the economy. We will repeal antiresource laws, cut taxes to drive reinvestment and eliminate the red tape that is choking homebuilding and business growth.
Second, we will fix the immigration system. We all know that the Liberals have broken the immigration system, flooding the market with labour and destroying long-held social bargains. We must fix credential recognition and realign immigration with labour and housing market realities.
Third, we will fix the training system. Federal student aid should no longer treat all studies the same. We are proposing that the Canada student financial assistance program provide relatively more support to students pursuing in-demand fields, determined based on objective labour market data. Taxpayer investments in education should prepare youth for jobs that are out there.
Fourth, we will build homes where the jobs are. Employers trying to hire in regions with labour shortages face major obstacles because workers cannot find nearby housing. To fix this, we are proposing a 100% capital cost write-off for companies that build workforce housing. This powerful incentive would help small businesses and large employers alike to attract workers while expanding the housing supply overall.
That is the Conservative plan, a plan rooted in common sense and action, not bureaucracy and excuses.
What is the Liberal plan? It is nothing but recycled announcements, photo ops and programs older than the young people today. The Liberals point to jobs funds from the 1990s, duplicate old programs and then claim victory while the crisis worsens every single day. They have spent billions on bureaucracy and have nothing to show for it, no new pipelines, no housing affordability and no youth employment gains.
Meanwhile, young Canadians line up at food banks, delay starting a family and lose faith in a system that no longer works for them. How can the Prime Minister claim to care about young people when every one of his policies makes their lives worse? How can a government that cannot permit a single project claim to support jobs? How can a government that taxes groceries claim to fight for affordability? How can a Prime Minister who has never missed a meal lecture struggling students about sacrifice?
The truth is simple: The Liberals broke Canada's promise. Conservatives will restore it.
The Liberals are saying that they are making so-called generational investments; instead, we are witnessing a generational betrayal. The Liberal government inherited one of the most prosperous, stable and opportunity-rich nations in the world and squandered it.
The Liberals hollowed out our industries, demonized our workers and replaced production and innovation with ideology and bureaucracy. They built a bloated bureaucracy and called it progress. Now the bill has come due, and they look to young Canadians and the next generation to pay the bill. That is not leadership; that is abdication.
Our Conservative plan will be different. We will unleash the power of young Canadians, not bury them under debt. We will cut taxes so that hard work pays off. We will scrap the industrial carbon tax and cut taxes on homebuilding, so farmers, truckers and builders can make life affordable again.
We will repeal the “no new pipelines” law, lift the tanker ban and scrap the production cap so that Canada can once again be an energy superpower that provides well-paying jobs to young people from coast to coast. We will reward hard work again, so we are not sacrificing to survive but working to thrive for a better tomorrow.
Canada's best days are not behind us, although that is what the Liberal Prime Minister wants Canadians to believe. They are ahead of us.