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Crucial Fact

  • His favourite word was system.

Last in Parliament September 2016, as Conservative MP for Calgary Midnapore (Alberta)

Won his last election, in 2015, with 67% of the vote.

Statements in the House

The Economy May 14th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, government spending is running out of control. In the last fiscal year program spending was up by over 7% and the government projects to see program spending increase by at least 5% a year, which is nearly twice the combined level of inflation plus population growth.

If we were simply to restrain spending at the rate of inflation and population growth there would be an additional $58 billion available for additional tax relief and debt reduction.

My question is for the finance minister. Why has he bowed to pressure from his big spending cabinet colleagues rather than doing the responsible thing, holding the line and providing Canadians with more of their own hard earned money?

Budget Implementation Act, 1997 May 14th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to rise at third reading of Bill C-17, an act to amend the Budget Implementation Act, 1997 and the Financial Administration Act.

There are two parts to the bill. I will emphasize the aspects related to the Budget Implementation Act, 1997. My colleague, the chair of the public accounts committee and chief critic for the treasury board, will address the amendments to the Financial Administration Act.

The bill seeks to increase funding for research and development through the Canada foundation for innovation by some $750 million over an undefined period of 10 years. This follows quite logically the remarks I just delivered on Bill C-22 when I discussed at length the irresponsible approach the government was taking to program spending.

I spoke about how in the fiscal year just ended program spending had grown by 7.1%, how the government had overspent its budgeted amount every fiscal year, and how for the next four years the government was estimated to average spending increases of about 5%. I expect it would be substantially more than that.

I also talked about the phenomenon known as March madness where ministers make spending announcements without proper authorization. I talked about how in April 2001, the last month of the fiscal year, we spent some $16 billion or 70% more than the average monthly amount.

This is of relevance to the bill before us. The government is proposing that we authorize an additional $750 million for the Canada foundation for innovation. Let me say at the outset that the official opposition, the Canadian Alliance, supports in principle an appropriate and responsible level of funding for research, development and innovation in academia which can be of economic value to the country. We believe government can play an appropriate role in that respect.

However such funding must be limited by the available resources. We are concerned that the $750 million funding envelope has no defined time period or parameters. It is not limited. The government says it may be spent over the next 10 years or so, or perhaps not. That is not a responsible approach. For a spending program like this the government has an obligation to come before us and detail where it expects to come up with the money and in which years and to book the money as spent in each of those fiscal years.

The auditor general has not only criticized the ongoing practice of March madness as inherently inefficient. He has repeatedly criticized the practice of booking future expenditures in one year as the government did with the famous millennium scholarship program and as it is doing now with the Canada foundation for innovation.

This accounting practice would not be accepted in the private sector. The government is ignoring its own rules and the recommendations of the auditor general in the way it is managing the moneys it seeks to authorize through the bill.

Another concern is that the government does not have a clear framework for financing science or research and development. We are dealing with major scientific and R and D projects on a case by case, piecemeal basis. My colleague from Calgary Southwest, our science and technology critic, has made and will continue to make important remarks on the subject. We need very clear criteria for the allocation of money for science, technology, research and development. Throwing the money into a big envelope and saying it will somehow be distributed on an equitable and meaningful basis is not good enough.

How do we adjudicate the relative economic and social value of a cyclotron project in British Columbia versus a nuclear research facility in Ontario versus a research program for astronomy? All these things come before us. Each has merits in and of itself but parliamentarians have no overall objective criteria by which to judge the value of competing R and D demands.

For that reason our party platform proposes that parliament appoint a chief scientist, a position which exists in many other national governments. Such a person would be the principal adviser to both the government and the legislature on scientific questions. He or she could help develop a clear framework to priorize the many competing demands related to R and D, science and technology. This would not require a large or expensive bureaucracy and it would be helpful to have such objective, external advice.

Those are our concerns regarding the first part of the bill. I will briefly outline our concerns regarding the amendments to the Financial Administration Act, concerns my colleague for St. Albert will elaborate further.

The clause seeks to clarify that parliament must provide explicit authority to departments, agencies, boards and commissions of the government in order to incur debt. That is very interesting.

I was briefed on the bill by officials from the Department of Finance who explained that the clause came about because of one of the government's innumerable legislative drafting errors. The error allows the Financial Administration Act to be interpreted in a way that permits departments and agencies to incur debt on their own authority without explicit authorization from parliament delegated to the Minister of Finance.

Over the past couple of years the Department of National Defence has been in a pitched quasi-legal battle with the Department of Finance over this question. The DND has sought independent borrowing authority not delegated by parliament which of course has the power of the purse.

We therefore support the aspect of the amendment regarding borrowing authority. However it begs the question: How can the government consistently bring forth legislation with such significant drafting errors which parliament must then spend valuable legislative time rectifying? That is a serious concern.

In bill after bill, as finance critic, I deal with all sorts of tax amendments which seek to amend errors in bills originally presented by the government. We must accept to a certain extent the bona fides of departmental officials and the government, the ministers who bring these bills to parliament, that they are technically correct. However too often they are not, as in this instance.

The amendment also deals with certain regulations surrounding the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board because of another drafting error. When the government made amendments to the Canadian Wheat Board Act it forgot to include the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. The CPP investment board is therefore subject to intervention by the finance minister. He can go into the CPP investment fund and strip cash out of it, contrary to assurances given at the time of passage of Bill C-2 in the last parliament which created the CPP investment board.

However because of a drafting error the finance minister, contrary to every assurance granted us, can go into the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and fire personnel, trash or write his own business plan, and strip cash out of the fund. This loophole needs to be plugged. It should never have occurred in the first place.

We will therefore be opposing the legislation. We will urge the government to take a much closer look at bills of this nature to ensure they do not create future problems which we must then go back and solve.

Budget Implementation Act, 1997 May 14th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, I seek unanimous consent to split the balance of my time with my hon. colleague from St. Albert.

Income Tax Amendments Act, 2000 May 14th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, the parliamentary secretary is in the twilight zone. He has to defend the highest personal income tax burden in the developed world. It is a tough job to do.

When the parliamentary secretary talked about the so-called tax savings he was including new spending transfers like the child tax benefit. The government will be sending out cheques to people and calling them the child tax benefit. That is fine but it is a spending increase and he is calling it a tax cut. That is not honest bookkeeping.

The parliamentary secretary wants us to ignore the $29 billion CPP tax grab. He says that is off-budget. It is in an Al Goresque lock box or something. That is nonsense. Those moneys have always been fungible. We know that money going into the CPP has been spent as though it were in general revenues. It is a tax that must be paid by Canadians mandated by the government.

What the parliamentary secretary really misses is the fact that even with some modest steps forward on the tax front, the government is allowing $58 billion to be gobbled up by new spending above and beyond the rate of growth in population and inflation. That is a missed opportunity of $58 billion which can and should be delivered to working families in the form of far more dramatic tax relief. This would enable us to increase our productivity and our standard of living.

The money could go toward the national debt but he did not even talk about that. He said that we could not reduce the debt until the deficit was eliminated. He is right. The government took four years to eliminate the deficit. According to Dale Orr of WEFA, Don Drummond of the Toronto-Dominion Bank, a former associate deputy minister of finance and the member's own colleague from Markham, we are now going back into a deficit.

Last October his colleague said that there could be as much as a $2.6 billion planning deficit. He did not address the fact that we are at risk of going back into deficit territory in the out years of the current fiscal plan because spending is not under control. That is the challenge and that is the question the government needs to answer.

Income Tax Amendments Act, 2000 May 14th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to rise in debate on Bill C-22. I spoke at the initial reading before the House. I would like to reiterate in closing the debate the opposition of the official opposition to the bill.

Often we are criticized of opposing for the sake of opposition. In fact I think we have a record of supporting about half of the government bills which are introduced, those which we think are sensible and lend incremental improvements to public policy. Bill C-22 falls far short of that standard in many respects.

It purports to legislate tax changes announced in the economic statement of last October. The economic statement, which was hurriedly put together by the finance minister on the behest of the Prime Minister immediately before an election, did not take into account the new economic circumstances in which we now find ourselves. At that time the finance minister was projecting a nominal GDP growth rate or real growth of 3.5%. It is now evident that given the downturn in which we now find ourselves, that economic growth for the current calendar year will be more like 2.5% or perhaps lower. It undoubtedly will have a substantial affect on the government's fiscal situation and the revenues available to it. It will also place an upward pressure on spending.

In the face of this new economic uncertainty in which we now find ourselves, the government has not responded at all. It has acted irresponsibly. The last full budget we had was in February, 2000. It now appears likely that there will not be a full budget presented to the House until February 2002. This would constitute the longest stretch of a budget not having been presented to parliament in the history of the Dominion.

At a time of economic uncertainty, when we see the United States continuing to go into possibly a technical recession, we see our third largest trading partner, Japan, in the midst of an economic and fiscal crisis. We see the possibility of Latin America veering off its economic course. Let us be objective and realistic about this, not pessimistic. Objectively there is the very real potential for more troubled economic times within the foreseeable future, yet we have no budget to take that into account.

The finance minister will apparently make one of his smoke and mirrors presentations with video charts and focused group language tested by his friends at Earnscliffe consulting at considerable taxpayer expense. He will that on Thursday. However it will not be a serious economic budget. It will not take into account the new circumstances. It certainly will not deal with the very serious corrosive problem of runaway Liberal spending which is now setting into the fiscal status of the federal government.

In the fiscal year just ended, 2000-01, it appears that the total program spending will have grown by about 7.1%. This is a huge increase at a time when inflation plus population is growing at a rate of just under 3%. In other words, spending under the government is growing more than twice as fast as the population and inflation. It is doubling the need for growth set by our economy, our inflation and our growth of the population. The projection for the foreseeable future is that spending growth will continue at a rate of at least 5%. We think it will likely be substantially higher than that given the track record of the government to date. This is simply not sustainable.

We had in the last fiscal year $11.1 billion in supplementary estimates above and beyond what was originally projected by the government a year ago in its main estimates. We had money which was been announced and not properly authorized or put through the estimates process in advance. We had the phenomenon known as March madness where the government spent as much as 70% more in the last month of the fiscal year than it did in any other month of the year. There was much as $16 billion in spending this past March.

The warning bells are ringing that spending is growing out of control. I can understand the political dynamic within which the Finance Minister must operate. I suspect he has tried his best to maintain the big spending old style Liberal habits of his colleagues and is simply losing that debate around the cabinet table in the caucus room now. The special interests in his caucus, the Minister of Canadian Heritage and the Minister of Industry and their big spending friends, continue to grapple for millions more taxpayer dollars. We see this in the fiscal bottom line.

The point is that every additional dollar in discretionary, unnecessary and wasteful spending that is committed by the government is a dollar taken away from perspective tax relief for working families to create new and better jobs. It is a dollar taken away from debt reduction to secure our long term economic future and pay down our still enormous national mortgage.

My colleagues opposite will say that the bill before us gives effect to tax changes and therefore there is still room for new spending. This ignores the economic reality in which we find ourselves. The reality is the bill purports to authorize $100 billion in tax reductions which is just complete nonsense.

When we clear away the smoke, the mirrors and the fudge it budgeting, when we take out the spending increase in the child tax benefit which is an entitlement program, it is a spending program not a tax cut, when we net out the $29 billion Canada pension plan premium increase, the largest single tax increase in Canadian history, an increase which has caused most Canadians so far in this calendar year to see their tax level go up after advertised tax cut and when the impact is taken out of de-indexing the tax system which is not a tax cut it is just a non-increase, we find that the real net tax cut over the ensuing five years is less than $50 billion.

Liberals do not increase taxes but all of a sudden they want to take credit for that as a tax cut. I am afraid it simply does not wash. If we tried that kind of accounting as a CFO at a company, we would end up making licence plates in a provincial institution. The net tax relief is half of what is advertised in the bill. That does very little to correct the significant disadvantage we continue to face vis-à-vis our major competitors and trading partners.

Canada continues today to have the highest personal income tax to GDP ratio in the G-7. In laymen terms that means we have the highest income taxes of any major country in the world; 14.1% of GDP. Even if we take the Finance Minister's bogus $100 billion figure and subtract that from our current tax burden, we still end up with Canada at a PIT to GDP ratio of 12.4%, the highest in the G-7.

It is substantially higher than that of the United States even today. Our major trading partner will be cutting taxes by at least $1.35 trillion U.S., not Canadian dollarettes, over the next 11 years, thus rendering the Canadian tax system even less competitive.

This would not be a problem if it did not have an effect on our standard of living, but it does and very substantially. Canada continues to see its rate of growth in labour productivity, an absolute key indicator of growth in our standard of living, at one-third the level of the United States.

I have raised this issue in the House during question period. The finance minister says our productivity is growing. Yes, it is, barely, by roughly 1.5% a year, while we see productivity gains in the United States of 4%. That means the U.S. is producing more and doing it more efficiently. It is creating more wealth which is shared by more people.

Why? It is not because Canadians are not hard working. They are hard working and well educated. It is because we penalize too many Canadians for working hard, taking risks and investing and saving. The very economic behaviours which create wealth and raise our standard of living are penalized by our punishing tax regime.

The government's bill would raise the basic personal exemption level to $8,000 under which a taxpayer would not pay taxes. The government claims this is a great act of progressivity. However it falls far short of what it ought to be doing to rescue low income Canadians forced on to the tax rolls by bracket creep. The government has benefited from this tax on inflation during the last eight years of its mandate. The government has put an additional 1.9 million low income people on to the tax rolls by way of bracket creep.

The Canadian Alliance proposes to raise the basic personal exemption to $10,000 and match it with a $10,000 spousal equivalent. We would no longer have second class citizens when it comes to the tax code. Stay at home parents would no longer be regarded as having less economic value than their income earning spouses. We would also have a $3,000 per child tax credit, which would mean that a family of four under our system would face zero taxes on their first $26,000 of income. That would remove at least 1.4 million low income Canadians from the tax rolls.

I find it galling to see Liberals pat themselves on the back about how progressive they are and how they favour the poor when in fact they oppose measures like this one, measures which would give real relief to the working poor and people on fixed incomes. That is another reason we oppose the bill.

We are not just penalizing people at the low end of the scale. Through the bill and in its economic statement of October the government would raise income thresholds at which people are taxed at higher levels at marginal rates. That is a baby step in the right direction but we are still miles from the threshold levels for marginal rates as set in the United States.

People do not enter the highest tax bracket in the United States until they earn over $250,000 U.S., or well over $350,000 Canadian, whereas one enters that bracket in Canada upon earning $100,000 Canadian. Bright young entrepreneurs who work hard, succeed and get ahead are penalized by the government the moment they break into six figures, but people in the United States earn three to four times that before being hit by the highest marginal rate.

I can feel my Liberal colleagues' soak the rich, politics of envy gene kicking in. They want to stand and say that the rich should pay their share. Successful Canadians do pay their share. The top 10% of income earners earn about one-third of the income in the country and pay about half the income taxes. The top 1% of income earners earn about 9% of the income and pay about 20% of taxes.

Those who create the most wealth and are successful pay a hugely disproportionate share of taxes. I am not necessarily arguing with that. However they would create more wealth, invest more, take more risks and ultimately create more jobs if we raised the income thresholds for the marginal rates substantially higher as is the case for many of our competitors.

The Canadian Alliance Party thinks the optimum tax policy is not to penalize people for working hard. We would adopt the generous exemptions I have outlined plus eventually a single rate which is progressive. We propose a rate of 17%. That would mean a family of four with $26,000 in income, given the generous credits we have proposed, would pay zero taxes. A family of four with $52,000 of income would pay 17% on only the taxable half of its income. It would pay an effective rate of 8.5%. A family of four with a multimillion dollar income would effectively pay 17%. My colleague from Toronto—Danforth who is the principal advocate of this idea knows full well that it is progressive.

We have serious concerns about the inability of the government to get tax policy right. Not only are we falling behind in terms of productivity growth. We are doing so in terms of competitiveness. We are not keeping up.

We are not keeping up on corporate taxes. According to a major study done by KPMG that appeared in the Economist last month, we have the highest corporate income taxes in the OECD at 42.1%. Our personal income tax burden, relatively speaking, is at least 21% higher than in the United States. In terms of competitiveness we are now ranked seventh by the World Economic Forum compared to the first place United States. Ireland, which is now in fifth place, has leap frogged over us. We have fallen behind in standard of living.

This is reflected in the value of our currency which is hovering at an all time low. Our currency has lost 25% of its value during the tenure of the Liberal government. It has a value of 65, 64 and sometimes 63 U.S. cents. That is an embarrassment and a reflection of the impoverishment of this nation under the policies of the Liberal government.

We oppose the bill and call upon the government to control spending. It must stop these crazy 7% annual increases in spending and allow it to remain constant. Spending must grow in relation to population and inflation growth so that we do not have net cuts in spending. We could let it grow at a gentle curve commensurate with the size of the country and the level of inflation.

Doing that during the five year period outlined in the finance minister's statement would mean an additional $58 billion for tax relief for working families, for job creation and for debt reduction to secure our long term future. That was the $58 billion missed opportunity of the finance minister's statement of last fall which he will reiterate on Thursday. It was a missed opportunity to create more wealth and pay down the huge national mortgage.

Often when we talk about the debt the finance minister jumps up and says we have reduced it. That is not true. The debt is about $60 billion higher today than when the finance minister took office in 1993. He has increased the debt. He has not paid it down. Public sector financial liabilities total about 106% of our gross domestic product. That is the third highest in the G-7 and the OECD.

The government says we can afford to increase spending by 5%, 6% or 7% a year and ignore the debt. However private sector economists have projected that we will be in a planning deficit by fiscal year 2004-05.

What does that mean? It means that in order to finance these reckless increases we will need to eat into the government's emergency reserves, the so-called prudence and contingency reserves. Those moneys are not supposed to be spent by reckless members of the Liberal cabinet. They are supposed to be set aside in case the economy shrinks.

The Liberals are already eating into the contingency reserve of 2004 based on very optimistic economic growth projections. If the economy turns down, the surplus that taxpayers have worked so hard to obtain will disappear and the promised tax relief will go down the sinkhole with it.

We are here today ringing alarm bells about the government's return to fiscal irresponsibility. We plead with it to look not just at the next two years but at four or five years down the road and what will happen if spending continues on its current trajectory. Therefore I move:

That the motion be amended by deleting all the words after the word “That” and substituting the following therefor:

Bill C-22, an Act to amend the Income Tax Act, the Income Tax Application Rules, certain Acts related to the Income Tax Act, the Canada Pension Plan, the Customs Act, the Excise Tax Act, the Modernization of Benefits and Obligations Act and another Act related to the Excise Tax Act, be not now read a third time but that it be read a third time this day six months hence.

Taxation May 11th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, yesterday the United States congress passed the largest tax cut in world history of $1.4 trillion.

Given that American labour productivity is already growing at three times the level of Canada and given that the huge tax cuts announced yesterday will make American tax levels permanently lower than those of Canada, what does the government propose to do to allow our productivity to compete with that of the United States?

The Economy May 11th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, the auditor general has repeatedly criticized the government's practice of March madness where ministers and departments blow billions out the door in order to spend it before the end of the fiscal year when the finance minister claws it back.

Could the Deputy Prime Minister tell us why his government continues to ignore these warnings from the auditor general? Why did it announce $16 billion of spending in the last month, in the dying days of the fiscal year just closed? Why did we spend 70% more in March than in any month in the rest of the year? Why is that?

The Economy May 11th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, while we are quoting economists, perhaps the Deputy Prime Minister noticed that Dale Orr from WEFA said that things would get pretty tight between 2003 and 2005 and that was why it was very important to make sure spending was well restrained.

The government was more than $2 billion over budget for the last fiscal year. In the month of March, the last month of the fiscal year, the government spent 70% more than the average for the other 11 months of the fiscal year. It was March madness taking over.

How can the government say that it has spending under control, when it threw billions out of the window in the last month of the year to satisfy its political agenda?

Government Of Ontario May 11th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, the Mike Harris government has done it again. Since 1995 it has continued to produce tax cutting, deficit reducing budgets that have put Ontario back on track. The most recent budget is no exception. It took the first steps toward eliminating the job killing capital tax, and Ontario's tax incentives are being completely reviewed.

I am especially thrilled that the Ontario government took the principled and courageous decision to recognize the enormous sacrifice and the public good done by tens of thousands of Ontario families who, for reasons of conscience and obligation, send their children to independent schools and pay for those schools with after tax dollars, many of these families with very modest means and incomes.

The refundable tax credit for receiptable independent school expenses announced yesterday is a policy that the Canadian Alliance has promoted. We are delighted to see that the Mike Harris government, against the shrill voices of the Liberal opposition and the big union special interests in Ontario, has decided that parents should be able to decide what is in the best interests of their children, and they should not be penalized for doing so. We want to commend Jim Flaherty.

The Economy May 7th, 2001

Mr. Speaker, no one is accusing them of quick fixes. What is happening big time is a decline in our standard of living. Per capita incomes have fallen to 78% from 87% of U.S. levels.

The member talked about productivity. Our productivity growth is about one-third as high as in the United States. Why does he continue to give us this kind of warmed over Liberal rhetoric when Canadians continue to see their standard of living, their disposable income and our wealth as a nation decline against those of our major trading partner?