House of Commons Hansard #102 of the 45th Parliament, 1st session. (The original version is on Parliament's site.) The word of the day was taxes.

Topics

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This summary is computer-generated. Usually it’s accurate, but every now and then it’ll contain inaccuracies or total fabrications.

Facilitating Agricultural Regulatory Modernization Act First reading of Bill C-273. The bill proposes allowing Canadian farmers to access agricultural products approved by allied nations within 90 days, aiming to reduce bureaucratic delays and regulatory red tape to lower costs and increase food production. 300 words.

Petitions

Opposition Motion—Fuel Taxes Members debate a Conservative motion proposing the total removal of federal fuel taxes to address the national cost of living crisis. The Conservatives demand immediate relief for farmers and truckers by eliminating excise, GST, and carbon levies. In response, the Government announces a temporary suspension of excise taxes. Meanwhile, the Bloc Québécois questions the motion's environmental impact, and the NDP argues that corporate profits should fund relief without cutting infrastructure or health services. 50500 words, 6 hours in 2 segments: 1 2.

Statements by Members

Question Period

The Conservatives dismiss the government's fuel tax relief as a half measure, demanding the elimination of all taxes on gas. They urge the government to defend private property rights following the Cowichan ruling and secret Musqueam agreements. They also raise ethics concerns over the Alto rail project and Iran’s UN committee membership.
The Bloc advocates for French-language regional news by calling for increased media funding and contributions from web giants. They also demand the government eliminate the EI "spring gap" and provide additional weeks of benefits for seasonal workers.
The NDP urges the government to enforce the Canada Health Act against expanding two-tiered diagnostics and care.
The Greens criticize cuts to scientific research in environment and agriculture, specifically for insect taxonomy.

Youth Criminal Justice Act Second reading of Bill C-231. The bill seeks to amend the Youth Criminal Justice Act by prioritizing addiction treatment for youth over traditional punitive measures. Representatives from all parties express support for the initiative, emphasizing the need for rehabilitation over incarceration. While supporting the overarching goal, some members propose targeted amendments to better integrate structured, evidence-based intervention and help youth break the vicious cycle of addiction. 5900 words, 45 minutes.

Conservation Donations Members debate Motion No. 15, proposing tax parity for land and monetary conservation donations. Liberals argue this voluntary approach leverages private investment for biodiversity goals. Conservatives oppose the motion, arguing it advances a "30 by 30" agenda that restricts economic activity and public land access. The Bloc Québécois supports the measure as a necessary tool to address the biodiversity crisis. 8300 words, 1 hour.

Adjournment Debates

Access to disability benefits Gord Johns argues the current disability tax credit process duplicates provincial efforts, wastes physician time, and creates barriers for applicants. He advocates for Bill C-211 to streamline access. Maggie Chi defends the current federal system, asserting it ensures consistent, equal support for Canadians across all provinces.
PrescribeIT program expenditure Matt Strauss criticizes the government for spending $250 million on the failed PrescribeIT project, demanding transparency through the release of the contract. Maggie Chi defends the government's decision to end the program, emphasizing their ongoing commitment to digitizing health care through new legislation and collaboration with provinces and territories.
Phoenix pay system replacement William Stevenson criticizes the government for the ongoing failures of the Phoenix pay system and expresses concern that the proposed replacement, Dayforce, will repeat past errors. Maggie Chi defends the government by citing improvements in pay accuracy and emphasizes that the gradual transition is designed to ensure reliability.
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Canadian HeritageCommittees of the HouseRoutine Proceedings

10 a.m.

Liberal

Lisa Hepfner Liberal Hamilton Mountain, ON

Mr. Speaker, as chair of the permanent Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, I have the great honour and pleasure of presenting three reports to the House of Commons today.

First, I have the honour to present, in both official languages, the fourth report of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, entitled “Impacts of Artificial Intelligence on the Creative Industries”. Pursuant to Standing Order 109, the committee requests that the government table a comprehensive response to the report.

Second, I have the honour to present, in both official languages, the fifth report of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, in relation to Bill S-227, an act respecting Arab heritage month. The committee has studied the bill and has decided to report the bill back to the House without amendment.

Third, I have the honour to present, in both official languages, the sixth report of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, in relation to Bill S-210, an act respecting Ukrainian heritage month. The committee has studied the bill and has decided to report the bill back to the House without amendment.

It is clearly a very busy and very productive committee.

Canadian HeritageCommittees of the HouseRoutine Proceedings

10 a.m.

Conservative

Kevin Waugh Conservative Saskatoon South, SK

Mr. Speaker, on behalf of the Conservatives who sit on the Canadian heritage committee, I would like to offer a dissenting report that we did in heritage on AI. I offer that to us today. We had an extensive meeting but, over the course of weeks, we had some concerns with the report that is coming out.

Citizenship and ImmigrationCommittees of the HouseRoutine Proceedings

10 a.m.

Liberal

Julie Dzerowicz Liberal Davenport, ON

Mr. Speaker, as chair of the immigration and citizenship committee, I am presenting two reports today.

I have the honour to present, in both official languages, the fourth report of the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, entitled “Reconstituting Canada’s International Student Program”. Pursuant to Standing Order 109, the committee requests that the government table a comprehensive response to this report.

In addition, I have the honour to present, in both official languages, the fifth report of the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, in relation to the motion adopted on Wednesday, March 25, regarding Canada's immigration system.

Citizenship and ImmigrationCommittees of the HouseRoutine Proceedings

10 a.m.

Conservative

Costas Menegakis Conservative Aurora—Oak Ridges—Richmond Hill, ON

Mr. Speaker, pursuant to Standing Order 108(1)(b), I rise as a member of the official opposition supporting the dissenting opinion appended to the report. We found that the government failed to consult communities on whether they could sustainably handle the massive influx of international students. While institutions collected record profits, international students were left at food banks and suffering from the heightened local housing crisis their large numbers were causing.

The lack of oversight from the government has recently come to light in the Auditor General's report, which found that the government investigated only 2.6% of the 153,000 suspected cases of international student fraud.

For these reasons, our recommendations include, among others, one, that international study permit approval be tied directly to regional housing availability, health care capacity and employment; two, that there be stronger language proficiency requirements to ensure student success; and three, that financial liability for institutions should be established when students overstay or file asylum claims.

I ask that the dissenting report opinion be appended to the committee report.

Bill C-273 Facilitating Agricultural Regulatory Modernization ActRoutine Proceedings

10:05 a.m.

Conservative

David Bexte Conservative Bow River, AB

moved for leave to introduce Bill C-273, an act to amend the Feeds Act, the Fertilizers Act, the Seeds Act, the Pest Control Products Act, and the Food and Drugs Act.

Mr. Speaker, the people of Alberta did not send me here to sit quietly while farms are run out of business by bureaucrats in Ottawa. Farmers sent me here to fix what is broken. Today, I am introducing the FARM act, a simple and practical way to make life better for Canadian farmers and more affordable for every family that depends on them.

For years, our farmers have been buried under layers of red tape, rules that do not make sense, delays that cost them money and barriers that keep them from using the same safe, proven tools their competitors already rely on in the United States, the EU, the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. Meanwhile, our farmers are told to wait: to wait for approvals, to wait for reviews and to wait while their costs climb and their yields fall. That is not protecting Canadians. That is holding them back. When farmers fall behind, Canadians feel it at the grocery store.

The FARM act would change that. It would create a trusted system where products are already approved by at least two of our closest allies and can be made available to Canadian farmers within 90 days. That is not years but days. Canadian reviews still happen, safety remains paramount and the minister will retain the authority to step in if there are concerns. This bill gives ranchers in Strathmore the medications they need to keep their herds healthy. It gives potato farmers in P.E.I. the inputs they need to produce more food. There is no new bureaucracy and no new spending, just common sense. It was written by a farmer for my colleagues in the field. It means stronger yields, lower costs, more food produced right here at home and stronger rural communities. It means some relief for Canadians who are tired of watching their grocery bills climb higher.

Canadian farmers are the best in the world. They need the government to get out of the way so they can grow food for families.

(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed)

Small BusinessesPetitionsRoutine Proceedings

10:05 a.m.

Conservative

Brad Vis Conservative Mission—Matsqui—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, I have multiple petitions to present today.

The petitioners in Mission—Matsqui—Abbotsford recognize that the total cost of regulation to Canadian businesses has reached $51.5 billion, with $17.9 billion of that for red tape alone. Small businesses have spent an average of 735 hours per year complying with regulatory requirements that provide little or no public benefit. Small businesses pay over five times more per employee than large firms to comply with regulation, making unnecessary red tape a major barrier to growth and a drag on Canada's productivity and competitiveness.

The petitioners therefore call upon the Government of Canada to immediately review and eliminate redundant regulations and overlapping requirements that disproportionately harm small businesses.

Public SafetyPetitionsRoutine Proceedings

10:05 a.m.

Conservative

Brad Vis Conservative Mission—Matsqui—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, the second petition I would like to present today is on behalf of residents of Mission—Matsqui—Abbotsford who are raising concerns about individuals linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a listed terrorist organization in Canada. The petitioners warn that such actors threaten national security and may be operating within Canada. They also note that sanctions and the closure of Canada's embassy in Iran have delayed immigration applications and prolonged family separation. They call upon the Government of Canada to enforce its designation of the IRGC by investigating and removing affiliated individuals where warranted, freezing linked assets and expediting immigration processes for affected Iranian nationals while supporting the Iranian people and protecting democratic values.

PeacekeepingPetitionsRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

NDP

Gord Johns NDP Courtenay—Alberni, BC

Mr. Speaker, it is an honour today to table this petition on behalf of petitioners who are part of the peace train movement. They highlight that for lasting peace, military deterrence must take place within the context of long-term solutions identified through research and analysis.

They also note that, within its NATO funding commitment, Canada can and should establish a national centre dedicated to peacebuilding and should contribute much more funding, training, equipment and personnel to UN peacekeeping, and that Canada's pre-eminent free institutions dedicated to peacebuilding have been terminated, including the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre and the Canadian Institute for Peace and Human Security. They point to a national defence report that recommends that the Government of Canada re-establish the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre with a mandate that includes, but is not limited to, conflict research, conflict prevention, mediation and civilian protection.

Lastly, they recommend that the Canadian Peacekeeping Veterans Association also advocate for the re-establishment of the former peacekeeping centre.

The petitioners' call to action is to establish and fund, as a fundamental part of Canada's increasing commitment to defence and security, an independent Canadian centre for peace dedicated to peacekeeping and global security through research, education, policy and training in conflict resolution, diplomacy and peace operations for Canadian civilians, police and military personnel, and the international community.

As members can imagine, this is a timely petition given the global conflict that we are enduring right now.

Public SafetyPetitionsRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Morrison Conservative Columbia—Kootenay—Southern Rockies, BC

Mr. Speaker, it is an honour to present petition e-7104, with over 700 signatures.

The petitioners call upon the Government of Canada to establish a comprehensive legal framework to protect minors from predatory drug dealers; to monitor social media, target online trafficking and require social media companies to implement policies to prevent it; to enact a federal law against child criminal exploitation based on the approach of the United Kingdom's crime and policing bill; and to empower and require police to thoroughly and effectively investigate all reports of drug trafficking and criminal exploitation involving minors, and to provide witness protection when needed.

Sixty per cent of all illicit drug users in Canada are young people aged 15 to 24, and drug overdose is the leading cause of death among youth ages 10 to 18 in several Canadian provinces.

AgriculturePetitionsRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Cathay Wagantall Conservative Yorkton—Melville, SK

Mr. Speaker, my first petition is being presented on behalf of citizens and residents across Canada who are calling on the government to reverse the planned cuts of 665 AAFC staff and closures of the organic and regenerative research program at the Swift Current office and the Lacombe, Guelph, Quebec City, Indian Head, Scott, Portage la Prairie and Nappan research facilities that serve our agriculture industry.

Religious FreedomPetitionsRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Cathay Wagantall Conservative Yorkton—Melville, SK

Mr. Speaker, the second petition that I am presenting today is in regard to Bill C-9.

I have many petitions on this issue, which has passed from this House to the other place. I have been requested to continue to present them because the bill will come back. The petitioners are hoping that this particular concern around the ability of all scriptures for all religions in our country to be protected as they are supposed to be is addressed and that, in the future when the House on the other side is doing the research, it will truly do its job and have the witnesses and stakeholders that will present what we hope will bring what Canadians want, an end to Bill C-9.

Questions on the Order PaperRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

Sydney—Glace Bay Nova Scotia

Liberal

Mike Kelloway LiberalParliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Transport and Internal Trade

Mr. Speaker, I ask that all questions be allowed to stand.

Questions on the Order PaperRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

The Assistant Deputy Speaker John Nater

Is that agreed?

Questions on the Order PaperRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

Some hon. members

Agreed.

Questions on the Order PaperRoutine Proceedings

10:10 a.m.

The Assistant Deputy Speaker John Nater

[For text of questions and responses, see Written Questions website]

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

Jasraj Singh Hallan Conservative Calgary East, AB

moved:

That, given that,

(i) gas prices have soared upwards,

(ii) Canadians now pay almost 20 per cent more at the pumps than Americans due to high Liberal taxes,

the House call on the government to adopt the Conservative plan to save Canadians 25 cents-a-litre by removing federal taxes on gas and diesel for the rest of 2026, including:

(a) removing the Fuel Excise Tax for the remainder of 2026, which costs Canadians 10 cents-a-litre;

(b) removing the GST on gasoline and diesel for the remainder of 2026, which costs Canadians 8 cents-a-litre;

(c) permanently removing the Fuel Standards tax, which costs Canadians 7 cents-a-litre; and

(d) permanently removing the industrial carbon tax, which will rise to $170 a tonne, and is projected to shrink the economy by 1.3 per cent and lead to 50,000 job losses.

Mr. Speaker, I am going to be splitting my time with the member for York—Durham.

The great Winston Churchill once said, “The idea that a nation can tax itself into prosperity is one of the crudest delusions which has ever fuddled the human mind.” After more than 10 years of the Liberal government, life has become miserable for Canadians, more unaffordable and unsafe than ever in the history of this country. Families are struggling just to get by, and they cannot afford even the basic necessities. They are just looking for a break.

Recently, the Liberal Prime Minister said that he is trying to find ways to save on gas. Well, we presented an idea. We put the solution in front of him: Remove all federal fuel taxes temporarily for Canadians, to save them money at the pump. From what I understand, the Prime Minister did what a typical Liberal would do and just recently took our idea, but he did not take the whole idea. He took only parts of the idea. Our goal was to save on the GST, the excise tax and, of course, the Liberals' hidden carbon tax repackaged as the clean fuel standard, which will go up. This would have saved Canadians 25¢ per litre at the pump.

We have to look at what is going on right now. Of course there are external factors that all countries are facing. Everyone is facing those same factors, but we have to look at why Canadians are paying, at a minimum, 20¢ per litre more than Americans are for fuel. The difference is the federal fuel taxes, so we put this solution in front of the Liberals, but, again, they did not implement it fully. Canadians would have saved 25¢ per litre for gas at the pump. Not just everyday Canadians would save money. It would help our farmers. It would help our transporters. It would help in many different ways.

It could also help bring down the cost of food. We know that after 10 years under the Liberals, Canadians are faced with the highest food inflation in the entire G7. Canadians have the highest household debt in the entire G7. We know that Canadians are struggling, because 2.2 million Canadians going to a food bank every single month is not a statistic that anyone should brag about. The cost of food is out of control in this country, and the solutions Conservatives are proposing would help to lower the cost of food and of everyday life for Canadians. Overall, they would also save Canadians $1,200 on gas just this year. That is a significant savings.

Even when people go to the grocery store, they can feel the difference when they are there. Not that long ago, people could get by for a week on 100 dollars' worth of groceries. One hundred dollars gets them nowhere these days under the Liberals, because they made the cost of food so expensive. Their industrial carbon tax, their clean fuel standard, which they refuse to drop, is making life more expensive. It makes food more expensive. That is why there is so much food insecurity.

In my riding of Calgary East, the Salvation Army does amazing work. It just reported a 500% increase in the usage of its food security program. That 500% increase is because the cost of food keeps going up. These are not numbers or statistics about which anyone should say, “Is that really a first world country where 2.2 million Canadians are going to a food bank every single month?”

Canadians are overtaxed. In fact, Canadians pay more in taxes than they do for food, shelter and clothing, in other words necessities, combined. That is the result of overspending, overprinting money and flooding the market with cheap cash. Who benefits from that? It is always Liberal insiders. For example, there is the $90-billion boondoggle called the Alto high-speed rail project. The finance minister has a supposed conflict of interest in that too, and it would be wealthy Liberal insiders who would get contracts and money from those contracts. They are the only ones who would get rewarded. Who gets left with the bill? It is Canadians. Everyday Canadians have to face the reality of the corrupt Liberal government.

The clean fuel standard is also a tax on everything. As I said before, the farmers who are growing our food, the shippers who are transporting our food, and even the people who are storing the food all get hit with either the clean fuel standard or the industrial carbon tax, or both. Sometimes this is in hidden ways, but these costs do not stay just with the farmers and the shippers. They actually get put into the cost of the food at the end of the day. Canadians who are buying the food and are seeing food costs out of control are the ones who have to pay these costs, and it is always Liberal insiders who get to benefit from these costs.

The Liberals do not have any control over what they are doing with Canadians' finances. In fact we thought Justin Trudeau was Canada's worst money manager, but the Prime Minister said, “Hold my champagne. I can do much worse.” He doubled Justin Trudeau's deficit, if we can believe that. It is something we thought no one could do. It was item number one once he became Prime Minister.

Removing the GST, the excise tax and the carbon tax 2.0, the clean fuel standard, would help the truckers and the farmers. It would help the cost of food go down. That is why Conservatives are proposing this: We know that Canadians are struggling with the cost of food. We all hear it in our ridings from moms who have to choose between less nutritious food or no food that week. Some of them are starving, just so their kids can eat. These are the choices Canadians are having to make. Seniors are having to make these choices too. There are people in food bank lines who had never used a food bank in their life. They used to proudly volunteer at the food banks, and now they are standing in line for food.

That is the result of the Liberal government. It is increasing costs, and there is no looking back for the Liberals. They will increase the industrial carbon tax and will increase the clean fuel standard, and this is only going to make things more expensive for Canadians.

The Liberals will argue that it might leave a hole in their budget. We are surprised that they would even care about that, with all the money they print and spend. However, if we implemented the removal of the fuel taxes federally, there would be more savings for Canadians and less of a downfall in how much the government would collect in revenues. This would be a win-win for everybody. Most importantly, it would be a win for those families that are struggling after 10 years of Liberal government.

We need to get our economy up and running again. We need to make Canada what it used to be, a safe and affordable country, which after 10 years under Liberal governments it has not been. It has become a joke around the world. We need to get our resources to market. We need to get rid of the industrial carbon tax and remove Bill C-69 so we can get projects built in this country.

We need to remove Bill C-48, the tanker ban, which does not let our product leave the west coast for Asian markets. We need to get rid of the clean fuel standard and every single one of the red tape policies that have stopped anything from getting built in this country. We need to get our country back on track so we can be sovereign, independent and an energy superpower once again. That is something only the Conservatives would do.

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:20 a.m.

Gatineau Québec

Liberal

Steven MacKinnon LiberalMinister of Transport and Leader of the Government in the House of Commons

Mr. Speaker, I listened attentively to my colleague's speech, and I would like to inform him that literally as we speak, the Prime Minister is announcing a historic break for Canadians, a summer break from excise taxes on diesel, jet fuel and gasoline. That follows the incredibly generous and necessary groceries and essentials benefit that was previously introduced. The government is putting in place solid measures to give Canadians a break and to make life more affordable. That follows on a number of other initiatives.

I would just ask the member this: Does he not have anything good to say about the affordability measures put in place by the government?

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:25 a.m.

Conservative

Jasraj Singh Hallan Conservative Calgary East, AB

Mr. Speaker, it seems as if the government House leader just got here, because I just addressed that.

Once again, in typical Liberal fashion, the Liberals stole our idea, but they did not steal all of it. They took only a part of it. In fact they did not get rid of the clean fuel standard and did not get rid of the industrial carbon tax, and we are even calling for the GST to be removed, which would be a savings of 25¢ per litre. However, like typical Liberals, they did only half the work and half measures, but that is what they are known for.

It does not really matter to the Liberals, because everything is politics for them. Right now they can make this announcement, but their clean fuel standard is still in place, which will make food more expensive. Canadians will not get a break at the grocery store whatsoever, and the break at the pump could have been a lot bigger if they had just implemented the Conservative plan fully.

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:25 a.m.

Bloc

Mario Beaulieu Bloc La Pointe-de-l'Île, QC

Mr. Speaker, I would like to know if my colleague has accounted for the impact of these measures on the environment and the deficit. It has been estimated that this would increase the deficit by about $7 billion.

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:25 a.m.

Conservative

Jasraj Singh Hallan Conservative Calgary East, AB

Mr. Speaker, in fact the impact on the deficit would be a lot less than the revenues they are taking in. This would actually be a benefit, and at the end of the day, that benefit would go to Canadians. Canadians would see a direct impact at the pump, and it would directly help lower the cost of food.

There are many different reasons we proposed the idea. It is too bad the Liberals once again did not implement the whole idea. They stole just a small portion of it. Once again, it is just politics to them.

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:25 a.m.

NDP

Gord Johns NDP Courtenay—Alberni, BC

Mr. Speaker, I just hosted four town halls in my riding on the cost of living and affordability, and I brought this very idea that the Conservatives are proposing to the people at those town halls. Nearly unanimously, people there wanted the taxes removed temporarily to provide relief. However, it was also unanimous that the people at those town halls wanted the big oil and gas companies, which are posting record profits, to pick up the tab. Attendees agreed that the relief needs to happen, but it should not be at the expense of investments in roads, infrastructure and health.

When will the Conservative and Liberal coalition for corporate welfare end? What is the threshold on corporate profits for big oil and gas before the Conservatives and Liberals will ask them to pay a little bit more when they win so they can take the pressure off everyday Canadians and pay their fair share for once?

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:25 a.m.

Conservative

Jasraj Singh Hallan Conservative Calgary East, AB

Mr. Speaker, it is interesting, because I held a town hall in my riding as well last week. I overwhelmingly heard about how the Liberals have caused the cost of living crisis and about how my constituents would like federal fuel taxes removed as well, which would help them at the pump and, of course, at the grocery store.

Where we differ, and where the Liberals have held Canada back from growth, is that if we want to properly fund our roadways and properly fund social services, we need a good and booming resource sector, which is something the Liberals have refused to do. In fact by keeping our resources in the ground, not only have we become more dependent but the world has also become worse off because it does not have good, clean, low-carbon energy from Canada. That is good-paying jobs and a good economy, which could help contribute to those roads and social services that my colleague is talking about.

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:25 a.m.

Conservative

Jacob Mantle Conservative York—Durham, ON

Mr. Speaker, I got up this morning and called home, as I do each day I am here in Ottawa away from my family, as I am sure many do. I asked, “What's the price of gasoline this morning? What's the price of diesel?” In my part of Ontario, just north of the GTA, it is ranging anywhere from about 165.9 to 175.9 for regular to around two dollars for diesel fuel. That is in Uxbridge, Port Perry, Cannington, Beaverton in Brock township and, of course, Sutton and Keswick in Georgina, which are all in my riding.

Here we are. The reality is that we have diesel that is about two dollars and $1.75 gasoline in a country that sits on the fourth-largest reserve of conventional and unconventional oil and gas. It should be a time when Canada is benefiting from instability in the world; instead, we are suffering because of it.

The war in Iran has certainly caused a spike in oil prices. It is one cause of what we are seeing at the pumps, but the other cause is, of course, self-inflicted. It is 10 years of policies from the government, whether it is old or new. Regardless of what they call it, the Liberals have been consistent, at least, in wanting to keep our resources in the ground. They would rather see Canadians starve, freeze and lose their jobs for some figment of an environmental ideology. The result is that we have two-dollar diesel and $1.75 gasoline.

Of course, we also do not have enough infrastructure. We do not have refineries. We do not have enough pipelines. We do not have a pipeline from east to west, so we cannot even get our resources to our own people. That is why places in my part of the country and further east, instead of utilizing Canadian energy, are importing energy from places around the world that none of us would want to vacation in. For example, there is Saudi Arabia, where, of course, women have no rights, but we are funding its regime to the tune of billions of dollars by importing its oil rather than consuming our own, from Canadians who have hard-working jobs and high pay and from where our industries have high environmental standards.

On top of these policy choices, what is worse in this whole situation, is that we clobber Canadians with taxes. We keep resources in the ground. We buy higher at world prices than it would cost to consume our own, and to add insult to injury, we clobber Canadians with taxes on top of that.

Depending on where people live in this country, taxes on fuel will range from 40¢ to around 60¢ per litre. That is combined federal and provincial taxes. Colleagues need to bear with me as I am going to go through them. It might take a while, but here we go. There is a provincial excise tax; local consumer carbon taxes if people are in certain parts of British Columbia; transit taxes, again, if people are in certain parts of British Columbia; provincial sales taxes; the federal excise tax; the federal sales tax; the clean fuel regulations tax; and the industrial carbon tax.

If colleagues were keeping track, that was quite a list, but one of the ironies of all these taxes is that the Liberals have, for months, called them imaginary. Every time I have asked a question on the clean fuel regulations or the industrial carbon tax, the government House leader, who just spoke, will get up to say that these are imaginary taxes.

Well, today, let us take two that the Liberals have said are imaginary. The industrial carbon tax was and remains a flagship Liberal policy. In fact, if we go back to read the Liberals budget from the fall, it mentions the industrial carbon tax at least nine times and, in fact, has a promise to increase that industrial carbon tax in the future. Indeed, how imaginary is that?

Next are the clean fuel regulations or the clean fuel standards tax. That is a real law. It is not imaginary. We can go on the justice laws website and look up the clean fuel regulations. In fact, the government has a dedicated web page for those regulations, so those are anything but imaginary.

It is because of that uncertainty and because of the cost for families that we are today proposing, as the Conservative Party, as the official opposition, to remove all of the federal taxes on fuel. We have estimated that that would save Canadians about $20 every time they fill up at the pump and about $1,200 from now until the end of the year.

We would pay for that by using some of the profits that the government will be reaping in with its higher revenue from higher oil prices, because of course we know that, as oil prices go up, provincial and federal governments take in more tax revenue. We have estimated that we could pay for our proposal with about $5 billion of the approximately $9 billion that will be taken in through higher oil revenues in this country. We would be using existing resources and not adding to the debt or deficit.

We have suggested removing four federal taxes, proposing to suspend the federal excise tax until the end of the year, suspend the GST on gas and diesel until the end of the year and eliminate both of the clean fuel regulations, the clean fuel standards tax and the industrial carbon tax. In my view, all of these are necessary. Each one by itself is simply insufficient to provide any real relief to families. I know the Prime Minister, just a few moments ago, announced not even a half-measure, maybe a one-eighth measure, to remove only the federal excise tax and only until September.

Let me put that into context. The plan we have proposed would save about 20¢ to 25¢ a litre. What the Prime Minister proposed today is just the federal excise tax, which is 10¢ per litre on regular gasoline and four cents per litre on diesel. That is less than half of what we have proposed and for about half of the time that we have proposed it for. I will comment just on the diesel as an example. Many companies, as we have seen reported in the media, are announcing fuel surcharges to deal with higher fuel prices. Taking four cents off a litre is not going to change corporate decision-making on that. Our proposal is 25¢ or about $1,200 a year. The Liberal proposal is 10¢ cents or four cents, just a few dollars, and not even until the end of the year.

The irony now is that, after this week's events, the Liberals will have all the power in the world to take all the most ambitious measures they want. After the events of this week, last week and prior weeks, the Liberals will have a majority in the House of Commons, so they could implement more ambitious measures with ease.

I think the media has been very disingenuous over the last evening and the last week. It was not the elections last night that gave the Liberals a majority. It was a handful of members of Parliament, including four previous Conservative members of Parliament, who made the decision to leave their party and join another. Despite my best efforts, I have been unable to locate any real issue of substance that would justify the member for Acadie—Annapolis's crossing or the crossing of any of the other three prior Conservative members.

Leaving a caucus might be understandable if there were an issue of principle for which the floor crosser stood, but there is none. There is no issue of conscience, no fundamental break of faith, just raw opportunism. Even statements by each of the members who made that decision reveal nothing really of substance. In the case of the member for Sarnia—Lambton—Bkejwanong, she simply made a reference to people telling her in the grocery store that they liked the Prime Minister.

I certainly like you, Mr. Speaker, and other members in the House, but I would not cross the floor for you.

In the case of the member for Markham—Unionville, he just made a vague reference to unity and decisive action. What decisive action? We have been here a year since the Prime Minister was elected. In the case of the member for Acadie—Annapolis, he simply said it was for a better path forward. I would invite him to explain what that path forward is, but I do not think he has the political courage to do so. In the case of the member for Edmonton Riverbend, he was simply and clearly smitten with the Prime Minister's speech in Davos.

None of those statements reflect any real issues of substance, and that is the problem. That is what Canadians smell. Canadians are not dupes. They smell the rank hypocrisy of the members of our caucus who left, the former members of the Conservative Party. The reason people take an action matters. The reason people do something, the justification they have or, in the case of these members, when they do not have justification, matters. That is why Canadians are so upset with these floor crossings, because there is no substance behind them.

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

10:35 a.m.

Marc-Aurèle-Fortin Québec

Liberal

Carlos Leitão LiberalParliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Industry

Mr. Speaker, let us come back to the Conservative Party motion because that is what we are here to debate. As usual, the motion contains several points. In fact, we agree with some of them, as our Prime Minister has said.

No matter what the issue is, Conservatives always bring up the industrial carbon tax, as if getting rid of it were some kind of magic cure. If we get rid of it, everything will be fine afterward. How can the member justify calling for the cancellation of the industrial carbon tax again when it has been shown that this tax currently has no impact on the price of fuel?

Opposition Motion—Fuel TaxesBusiness of SupplyGovernment Orders

April 14th, 2026 / 10:40 a.m.

Conservative

Jacob Mantle Conservative York—Durham, ON

Mr. Speaker, it is not magic; it is just mathematics. When taxes are removed, it lowers the price of things in this country. This is why our plans, all four of them, were estimated to lower the price of gasoline by about 25¢. It is not magic. The Liberals just need add up the numbers and remove the taxes to get a better outcome for Canadians.

I do not disagree with some of the things they have done, but they need to do more. They need to do them all. I ask them to not take a half-measure when they can clearly go the whole way and give full relief.