Mr. Speaker, the motion on the floor today is:
That the House...support the construction of one or more pipelines enabling the export of at least one million barrels a day of low-emission Alberta bitumen from a strategic deepwater port on the British Columbia coast to reach Asian markets, including through an appropriate adjustment to the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act, while respecting the duty to consult Indigenous peoples.
This is the Liberals wording, word for word, from the MOU. Having the Liberals oppose and debate their own wording is confusing. This is why we are trying to put this motion on the floor today. Canadians deserve an answer, yes or no.
In B.C., the Liberal Party will tell British Columbians that there will be no pipeline built, but in Alberta, those same Liberals will say that yes, a pipeline will be built. Which is it? This is the first opportunity for the Liberals to tell the truth in their intentions to build Canada strong, to turn us into an energy superpower, to turn us into the best performing country in the G7, but we are watching Liberals argue with Liberals. Liberals are arguing their own climate action plan. In fact, ministers are resigning because they are saying that the Liberals are walking away from their own climate action plan and their commitments to the Paris Accord.
It was not too long ago when the Liberals were condemning everybody who did not support a carbon tax or did not support a climate action plan. Now, Liberals are condemning Liberals for not supporting their own climate action plan. The Conservatives have been trying to help the Liberals turn Canada into an energy superpower. We would not have agreed to using emergency powers like the former prime minister promised. I think that is going too far. Do members remember the emergency powers? They are the ones that allowed convoy truckers to be thrown into jail and have their bank accounts frozen. The courts found it unconstitutional. I could not have agreed to that.
The Liberals claimed that they needed superpowers to get pipelines built, so they brought in Bill C-5, the Building Canada Act, and it got passed by the House of Commons. They knew full well they did not need Bill C-5, as they had all the powers already, but this is typical of what the government has been doing. The Liberals promise, promise, promise, and then they do not deliver when they become government.
The Prime Minister promised to reduce the prices at the grocery store, and his words were that he would be judged by the prices at the grocery store. Then, not one item in the budget actually talked about prices at the grocery store.
I think the real problem we are dealing with here is something that has to be revisited, and it is how this all came about, which is the United States and, specifically, President Trump. We cannot take what President Trump says about Canada literally. President Trump said that Canada should become the 51st state of the United States. We cannot take that literally, but we should be worried about Canada becoming a vassal state. A vassal state is a country with limited sovereignty that is subservient or submissive to a more powerful state, often paying tribute in the form of taxes or resources.
Canada, under the Liberals for the last 10 years, intentionally weakened its own economy by saying no to extracting and exporting its own resources. This would have been okay if the Liberals had replaced the economy with something else, but they did not, and now they are scrambling to fix a problem that they created. Canada should not have been in this weakened state to begin with. With or without Trump, this would have happened. When we take away the strength of a country, we leave ourselves vulnerable to other powerful countries. There are two powerful countries in the world right now: China and the United States.
Let us get back to the pipeline. Canada exports oil to the United States, with 93% of Canadian oil going to the United States. While our brilliant Prime Minister banker says that we have to get off our dependence on the United States, he offers to the United States another pipeline going to the United States.
The Prime Minister offered to build Keystone XL. What is the point of that? President Trump was so happy that our Prime Minister offered to export more oil to the United States, do members know what he did? He imposed more tariffs on Canada.
What is next? As a tribute to the United States, our Prime Minister offered to invest $1 trillion of private Canadian money in the United States. How did Trump respond? He imposed more tariffs. What is the point of negotiating when the situation just keeps getting worse?
The Prime Minister then condoned an ad that was run in the United States, which United States lawmakers refer to as foreign interference. Canada was interfering with the politics of a foreign country, which just happens to be a global superpower. What did Trump do? He imposed more tariffs and increased tariffs.
What is happening now? After the latest meeting with Trump, what did our Prime Minister learn? He learned that Trump is going to threaten tariffs on Canadian fertilizer. That is more exports.
By the way, is potash being shipped out of B.C. ports a reality? No. The company decided to ship out of United States ports instead. That is more tribute to the United States and more private Canadian investment money going to the United States.
Stellantis is an example of more private Canadian money going to the United States. In this case, we could argue that this is public money because the Liberal government gave Stellantis $15 billion. Stellantis then packed up the auto manufacturing facility and moved to the United States. Stellantis then offered $13 billion to President Trump as tribute. The government says that it is going to get that money back, even though it did not read the contract that it signed with Stellantis. I hope it has been read by now.
On top of this, there is CUSMA, the trade agreement between the United States, Canada and Mexico. President Trump is threatening to withdraw from that agreement. The argument is that the default will be the previous agreement that existed before CUSMA. That is a weak premise, given who we are dealing with south of the border. Do we really think that Trump is going to agree to that?
In this new world of geo-economics, Canada is now in a weakened position, with no leverage to negotiate with the United States, much less anybody else. Liberals are now starting to beg Europe for some type of alliance. There are the fighter jets that they are talking about buying. Instead of buying jets from the Americans, as promised, they want to buy from Sweden, but the licensing technology belongs to the United States.
With all of the insults that the Prime Minister has given across the board, saying that pipelines are “boring” and responding, “Who cares?” when asked if he had talked to the President of the United States, do we really think that the United States is going to allow licensing to leave any of the manufacturers all around the world?
This is a different world we are living in. In Canada, we are 10 years behind the times because of failed Liberal policies. The vassal state is a reality. If it continues on the road it is going down, our grandchildren and children are going to have to not only deal with failed economics but also deal with the politics that are playing out, right now, here in Canada.
We have not even begun to talk about the Arctic and Arctic sovereignty. How are we going to fund that when we have no economy? Right now, the Liberal answer to this is to go back to taxes or hide it through rates.