Mr. Speaker, is anyone really better off in Canada than they were before? Will this budget make life any more affordable or safer?
We thought Justin Trudeau was the worst money manager in Canadian history. The current Prime Minister makes him look like Scrooge, because he just delivered the most expensive budget in Canadian history outside of COVID. In fact, he will double Justin Trudeau's deficit, if members can believe that. It is unfathomable that in this budget, the Liberal government just slammed, on top of all the other taxes and expenses, another $5,400 of costs onto Canadian households. It is an empty-promise budget.
Is anyone better off? I am looking at the 2.2 million Canadians waiting in a food bank line every single month, 700,000 of whom are children. I am thinking about the seniors who have to choose between eating and heating, or the single mom who goes to the grocery story and sees that Liberal inflation on food has made everything more expensive. In fact, food inflation is twice the bank's target and is growing 50% faster in cost here than it is in the U.S. That single mom has to choose what she can pick out for her kids this week, whether it is nutritious or not, because more nutritious food is more expensive under the Liberal government. Will she have to sacrifice and go hungry so her kids can be fed?
When we look at this budget, there is absolutely nothing inside it for the everyday Canadian. I remember that when I moved here with my family, people could get by with just one income. In elementary school, I remember getting a paper route to help out at home. We did not come here with much. We lived through very harsh poverty. We used to stand in line for low-income bus passes. However, there was a hope. With hard work, back then people could have an affordable life. They could afford groceries and housing, and most importantly, they could live in safe neighbourhoods.
After 10 years of the government, which doubled housing costs, doubled food inflation, doubled food bank usage and increased crime by 55%, Canada is not Canada anymore. It certainly does not feel like it, because the government has done the most irresponsible thing with the safety of Canadians and their money.
The Prime Minister had the gall to stand up in front of young Canadians and tell them they would have to sacrifice more so he could spend more, and, boy, will he spend a lot of money. In fact, if the deficit is doubled, it can only be paid in a few ways. He will raise taxes again, or it will be paid through the silent tax, inflation, which will make sure that all the things Canadians buy will be more expensive afterward.
How much more do young Canadians have to sacrifice? Let us look at the affordability crisis the government has created.
Young Canadians who do the right thing, work hard, go through school and graduate cannot find a job, cannot move out of their parents' basement and certainly cannot afford anything. They cannot meet the milestones of their life that are so important and that we used to consider the Canadian dream, such as going to school, getting a good job, getting married, buying a home and having kids.
All of that is being sacrificed because the Prime Minister thinks it is more important that his banker buddies get paid more on the interest on the debt that the government has put on top of Canadians. In fact, it is so bad that his banker and bondholder buddies get more money than what goes to the provinces in health care transfers. The money his banker buddies get is more than what Canada collects in GST revenues.
This budget has nothing to help Canadians who are fearing for their life these days. Violent crime is out of control. It is up 55%. Gun crime is up 130%. Extortion, which has really affected the South Asian community, is up 330%. The Liberals could not even say “extortion” in this budget.
Canadians will not feel any safer now. Whether they are sitting at home, sitting in their car or walking their kids to school, every Canadian is saying they are scared. Under the government, which has soft-on-crime policies, criminals have more rights than victims. The budget changes none of that.
The Prime Minister is notorious for breaking every single promise. He said he was the guy to deal with President Trump. In fact, his elbows went missing and Canada's tariffs went up. Every place that he or his Minister of Foreign Affairs goes, tariffs go up and Canada's ranking in the world gets lower. He went to China; the tariffs went up. He said he could deal with Trump; again, the tariffs doubled. If the Prime Minister really had his elbows up, Canada would have a better deal and a better standing in the world, but obviously we do not. He said he would spend less. In fact, he doubled the deficit and put more debt on Canadians' heads.
Every single broken promise is more expensive for Canadians, who are already struggling under the government. Young Canadians have lost the dream of home ownership. Yesterday there was another broken promise, and the Governor of the Bank of Canada proved it. The Liberal government continues to say we have the fastest-growing and strongest economy in the G7. I asked the Governor of the Bank of Canada what he thought about it. He said that, in fact, Canada does not have the fastest-growing economy in the G7; Canada has the fastest-shrinking economy in the G7, and our economy is collapsing. That is why we are seeing that Canada also has the second-highest unemployment rate in the G7.
Why is that? It is because the Liberal government, with its antidevelopment, anti-energy laws, drove $600 billion of good Canadian investment to the United States. Under the current Prime Minister alone, $60 billion of good Canadian investment in jobs, talent and machinery has gone to the United States. The Liberals do not want anything to be built here. The only thing they are building in this country is more bureaucracy. That is on the taxpayer's head.
The Liberals need to get rid of these anti-energy laws that will not let anything get built. They have these so-called investments, but we are not seeing more investment coming into Canada from the private sector. It does not pay to invest here in Canada under the Liberal government. That is why pipelines are being built outside, and nothing is getting built here. That is why our unemployment rate is going up and youth have no hope that they are going to be able to find a job after they graduate.
What we need to do, and what the Leader of the Conservative Party will do when he becomes Prime Minister, is unleash our economy by getting rid of all the antidevelopment laws in Canada from the Liberal government. We will get rid of the industrial carbon tax, Bill C-69, Bill C-48 and the oil and gas cap so that our food prices come down. We will have good Canadian jobs, and Canadians will be able to get good paycheques once again in this country.
We will strengthen the justice system so that Canadians can feel safe again, by reversing the same laws that give repeat violent offenders bail. We will give them jail and not bail so that they stay where they belong, behind bars, and Canadians can feel safe once again.
We will give Canadians affordable housing once again. Let us remember that, under the Conservative government, it was half the cost for housing, and it was a lot cheaper to get food. One paycheque used to do. We will bring back that same Canada, where hard work will give a good paycheque, with low taxes, so Canadians can afford homes and food, and they will have hope. On top of that, Canadians will be able to live in a safe community once again.
With that, I move:
That the amendment be amended by deleting all the words after the words “the government's budget statement” and substituting the following:
“since, instead of presenting an affordable budget so Canadians can have an affordable life, it presented a budget that fails to:
a) consider that every dollar the Liberal Government spends comes out of the pockets of Canadians in the form of higher taxes and inflation;
b) bring down the deficit to the level Liberals promised in their last fiscal update, which promised $42 billion last year;
c) scrap hidden taxes on food, including the industrial carbon tax on farmers, the food packaging tax that adds billions in costs, and the fuel standard tax that adds 17 cents per litre to diesel and gasoline for farmers;
d) end the inflation tax by bringing down the cost of government instead of printing money to pay Liberal bills; and
e) include a plan for any oil and gas pipelines that would strengthen our nation's economy and get our resources to market.”