Mr. Speaker, I will be sharing my time with the member for Humber River—Black Creek.
It is an honour for me to rise on behalf of the people of Vaudreuil on my son Anderson's 11th birthday to speak to our new Liberal government's 2025 budget.
This budget meets the needs of Canadians at a crucial time for our country. It includes measures that will meet the needs of families and seniors and support young people. It is about making life more affordable and building a stronger country.
This budget is about building a more prosperous and resilient economy at a time when we can no longer rely on trade with our largest trading partner and when global economic uncertainty is on the rise. Affordability remains of utmost importance to Canadians. That is why, in our 2025 budget, we are cutting taxes for the middle class, which will save two-earner families $840 a year. That means more money in people's pockets at a time when they need it the most.
It is also why we are continuing to invest in expanding the Canadian dental care plan, which is expected to save families an average of $800 a year. The most recent expansion of the program, which is now available to those with a net family income of up to $90,000, will benefit more than five million Canadians who have registered for it. We are making dental care a right, not a privilege. No one should have to choose between eating well and taking care of their teeth.
Budget 2025 also includes an investment to develop the national school food program brought in by our Liberal government. It will save families even more money and prevent tens of thousands of Canadian children from going to school hungry.
Making life more affordable is also about housing. Any young person trying to find their first home these days knows how hard it is, and it is not just young people. Across the country, adult children are living with their parents much longer not by choice, but because they cannot afford to pay rent, let alone buy a house. That is why in budget 2025, our government is eliminating the GST for first-time homebuyers on new homes up to $1 million, which represents tens of thousands of dollars in savings for those hoping to take this important first step.
We are also taking action on the supply side, because we know that affordability also depends on how quickly we can build more housing. That is why we are committed to doubling the pace of residential construction in Canada. To achieve this, in budget 2025, we launched Build Canada Homes, an ambitious plan to get the government back into the business of homebuilding and ramp up housing construction by leveraging Canadian technology, Canadian lumber and Canadian labour. By supporting innovative approaches such as modular and prefabricated homes, we are reducing timelines, cutting costs and creating jobs along the way.
For anyone looking to buy their first home, rent an affordable home or help their children find a place to live, the Liberal government is listening and taking action, because all Canadians deserve a safe and affordable place to call home.
Another pillar of budget 2025 I would like to speak to is our plan to build Canada's economy of tomorrow, an economy that is more resilient, an economy that is more diversified and an economy that is less dependent on trade with the United States and that includes strong measures to protect Canadian jobs, Canadian workers and Canadian families from the unfair and unjustified tariffs put in place by President Trump.
Our plan is thoughtful and multi-faceted. First, for far too long, provincial trade barriers have fragmented our economy and slowed our growth. That is why we are harmonizing regulations, eliminating barriers to internal trade and investing in infrastructure that connects communities across provinces. We envision one country, one economy, more unified, more efficient and, yes, more competitive.
This matters to small businesses in my community of Vaudreuil looking to grow beyond Quebec. It matters to farmers in my community who need to get their products to market. It matters to every Canadian who wants to see our federation work as one team, not as 13 teams creating unnecessary barriers to prosperity.
Second, budget 2025 would invest in infrastructure, both physical infrastructure and the policy to support it, to foster a united economy, from high-speed rail to expanded port capacity, so that Canada's goods move faster and our economy becomes stronger. We are rich in natural resources, we are rich in innovation and we are rich in skilled labour.
With budget 2025, we would build the infrastructure to forge the new agreements needed to bring those assets to the world on our terms. One of those terms is to continue to build a Canada that we want and need in a sustainable way, a way that leaves a stronger, more resilient and healthy future for our children and our grandchildren.
Budget 2025 reaffirms our commitment not to just build a stronger economy but to do so while taking decisive action against climate change. That means finding new and innovative ways to keep emissions down, and it means looking at ways in which we can get our country's energy, minerals and products to market while meeting our climate obligations to future generations.
Budget 2025 includes our Liberal government's climate competitiveness strategy. Indeed, as I have said many times in this House, climate action must continue to be intricately incorporated into Canada's economic strategy. While some would still have us believe that we have to choose between the environment and the economy, our government knows that the path to prosperity is the path to sustainability. Having served as the chair of the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities for the last four years, I can attest to the benefits these investments and policies would bring from coast to coast to coast.
Third, our plan would diversify the Canadian economy by reducing our dependency on the American market while simultaneously strengthening partnerships with our allies in the G7 and the European Union and forging new trade opportunities in global markets. This approach was reflected in the choice the Prime Minister made to make France and the United Kingdom his first two international visits upon taking office, reinforcing ties with our two close friends, allies and G7 partners.
The last pillar of budget 2025 that I would like to touch on is our plan to protect Canada and Canadians. This means protecting economic sovereignty, our territorial integrity and our shared prosperity in a world that is increasingly unstable. That is why the Prime Minister's third visit was not to another capital, but to Canada's Arctic. This is no coincidence. As climate change opens new navigation routes and great powers compete for influence in the north, Canada is acting to defend our Arctic sovereignty, protect our natural environment and secure the economic future of northern communities.
We are modernizing NORAD, strengthening partnerships with Australia to deploy advanced radar systems and making historic investments in the Canadian Armed Forces to face 21st-century threats head-on. In a world marked by rising authoritarianism and global instability, Canadians deserve a Canada that has the resources, the know-how and the capacity to defend Canadian values, defend our sovereignty, support our allies and meet the moment with strength and unity.
That is why budget 2025 would make generational investments in the Canadian Armed Forces and our border security. It includes investments that would see the hiring of 1,000 new border agents to strengthen our borders, who would be trained right in my community of Vaudreuil, in the town of Rigaud. It includes investments that would see the hiring of 1,000 new RCMP officers to help keep our communities safer and combat organized crime. Budget 2025 would increase pay and benefits for our brave men and women in uniform and would make historic investments that would help equip the Canadian Armed Forces with the equipment necessary to meet the needs of Canadians here at home and meet challenges and threats abroad.
This budget lays out a clear vision and a clear plan. I am proud to support it. I am proud to be a part of this Liberal government, and above all, I am proud to serve the people of Vaudreuil, who sent me to this chamber for the fourth time this past April. I am proud to work on their behalf to try to build a better Canada for them and their families. Budget 2025 would do just that, and I invite all hon. members of this House to support it.