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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 Budget March 2nd, 1999

Mr. Speaker, I do not know how to match that enlightened exchange. I left my cowboy boots off but I will do my best to get into this pay more, get less budget.

I am shocked and appalled at some of my hon. friends opposite who purport to know what wealth creation is all about. They know how to balance a budget and to meet a payroll. One of my friends from Mississauga South claims to be an accountant. My condolences to him.

These people should know how to read a set of financial documents. They should be able to understand what a surplus is, what a deficit is, what a tax is and what a spending increase is. Apparently they do not.

I have spent the last several years of my life studying public finance. I may not be any great expert, but I can say that the budget document presented to this place by the finance minister three weeks ago was not a budget. When it comes to presenting in a transparent fashion the public finances of the country the budget was a joke. No serious financial analyst in the country would give the budget a unqualified grade in terms of the transparency of its reporting of public spending and government taxing.

That has to be the starting point of this debate. Even though most laymen do not want to spend much time sifting through the details and the numbers to come to the bottom line, the reality is that we as parliamentarians must be able to read that document and understand what the heck is going on in terms of spending, taxing, debt borrowing and debt.

We cannot do that because the finance minister has become the laughing stock of public accounting. He included spending in this year's budget that will happen two years from now. In some areas of this year's budget he included spending that happened two years ago. He called spending increases like the child tax credit entitlement a tax cut. There are some tax increases which he calls spending cuts. As a starting point, it is virtually impossible to get to the bottom of what the budget is all about.

We as the opposition do not have to make an argument about the fact that the budget will actually increase the taxes of Canadians and will result in fewer government services than was the case in 1993. We do not have to make that case because people know it intuitively. They know it through their experience.

People know they are paying more taxes now than they ever have before in their lives because of the irresponsible fiscal policies of the government. They know that the standard of health care which they receive is at a lower level than they can ever remember.

We do not have to make a political argument to the 186,000 Canadians who stand today on waiting lines for essential health care services. We do not have to make a political argument to the 1.2 million low income Canadians paying taxes today who were not paying taxes when the government came to power in 1993. We do not have to make a political argument about the effect of the budget and its predecessor budgets on middle class single income earner families that are paying more and more and more year after year, even though they are working harder and trying to play by the rules.

We do not have to make that argument because they see it on their paycheques. They see it when they go to the emergency rooms. They see the deterioration of public service as a result of the government's misplaced spending priorities. They see that they are struggling harder and harder just to get by. It really is not a question of making a political argument.

I heard the member for Mississauga South just now and earlier during question period the hon. Secretary of State for International Financial Institutions suggest that among other things the budget would somehow take 600,000 low income Canadians off the tax rolls by allegedly raising the basic personal exemption.

Again, as I pointed out in question period, with the new Liberal math they forget to tell us the whole story. Part of the story is that since 1993, 1.2 million low income Canadians, those who can least afford it, many of whom are under the poverty line, single mothers and single parents struggling to get by or seniors on fixed incomes, have seen themselves pushed on to the tax rolls by the government's pernicious back door tax grab called bracket creep, by the pernicious tax on inflation.

If these people get a cost of living adjustment in their pension cheques or their minimum wage income from working in the labour force, if they get an automatic COLA, a cost of living adjustment, they end up paying taxes not because they are making more in real terms—they are making the same in real terms—but because the government decides to generate more revenue to finance its insatiable appetite for spending in a way that is not transparent, in a way that Canadians cannot see it and in a way that parliament cannot approve it.

In a study released last week by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, an organization with which I have some familiarity, it was reported that since 1986, since the then Progressive Conservative government brought in bracket creep and deindexed the tax system with respect to any inflation under 3%, the government has generated an annual revenue haul of $12 billion. That is just as a result of bracket creep. Next year Canadians will end up paying $1,300 more than they did before as a result of the consequence of bracket creep.

The government has added 1.2 million people on to the tax rolls. It has pushed millions of modest income Canadians into higher tax brackets. Then it claims, lo and behold, that by some absolutely token adjustment in the basic personal exemption in the budget it will be lifting 600,000 Canadians off the tax rolls.

Government members forget to tell us that they have not indexed the tax system to inflation. They have not eliminated the pernicious tax grab called bracket creep. It continues its nasty work of increasing taxes on Canadians so that 300,000 more Canadians will be paying taxes two years from now as a result of the effects of bracket creep.

Let us just do some simple math here. Liberals may have to get out their calculators to follow it. If we take the 1.2 million people the Liberals have added to the tax rolls since 1993 and subtract their figure of the number of people who will be taken off the tax rolls as a result of the increase in the personal exemption, we end up with a net of 600,000. If we add to that 600,000 new taxpayers the 300,000 who will end up back on the tax rolls as a result of bracket creep, what is the net number? Maybe some of my friends opposite could not follow the math, but 900,000 low income Canadians will be paying taxes two years from now. These are the Canadians the government claims to speak for in terms of those who need the most help from society.

I do not need to make the argument because grassroots Canadians make it every day. As revenue critic I get flooded with letters from people who tell me about it. For example, a constituent of mine, James Mitchell, e-mailed me recently to say:

I just read about the federal Liberal budget. I am married, have two small children. My wife has chosen not to work but to stay at home and raise them. I make $80,000, which is sort of a middle class income, and therefore the government treats me as a cash cow. As an employee I have no deductions. My wife has been forced to dip into RRSPs. I don't get a tax credit for her or for our children. We are living from paycheque to paycheque and have no savings. I am appalled that the Liberal view is to spend instead of reduce taxes. While I was born and raised in Calgary I feel that there is no hope in this country for a family like ours. I am now making plans regrettably to move to the United States where I will be able to save for my future and provide for the education of my two children and at the same time maintain and improve my standard of living.

That is a tragedy, a tragedy that was reiterated by Arthur Friedrich who wrote to the National Post yesterday. He is a steelworker who indicates that at one point he was a campaign worker for the minister of heritage. He says that he will be moving to the United States as well. He started work as a steelworker. He goes through his family's fiscal situation and winds up by saying that he is being bludgeoned by the tax system and deeply wishes that things were different. “I like Canada and really wanted to stay, but I no longer see any future for my children in this land”. This is the tragedy of the Liberal government's pay more, get less approach to fiscal mismanagement, and it must end.

Taxation March 2nd, 1999

Mr. Speaker, we heard earlier from the Secretary of State for International Financial Institutions the specious claim that the government claims to be taking 600,000 people off the tax rolls through tax policy changes in this budget. But he seems to have forgotten in his new Liberal math that 1.2 million taxpayers were added to the tax rolls since 1993 because of bracket creep and that another 300,000 will be added back on in the next two years as a result of bracket creep.

How does he come up with this specious figure when in fact 900,000 people will be paying taxes in 2001 who were not when this government came to power?

Taxation March 2nd, 1999

Mr. Speaker, the Liberal philosophy is to say to people who decide to keep a parent at home and forgo a second income, to make an economic sacrifice, to do what they think is best by their children, that they will be discriminated against and have to pay more taxes than a family with more income. It makes no sense. It simply is not fair.

The House recognized that in the last parliament when it passed a Liberal member's motion to stop tax discrimination against single income families. When will the government begin to address this gross inequity and level the playing field for families that make sacrifices for their kids?

Taxation March 2nd, 1999

Mr. Speaker, for years it has been a mystery to Canadian families why the tax system discriminates against those who make the sacrifice of forgoing a second income to have a parent stay home and raise the children but now, lo and behold, we have found the government's answer.

It believes families that decide to keep a parent at home to raise the kids are not working. Let me tell the secretary of state that stay at home parents work harder than many people who are generating income and they deserve recognition in the tax code.

How can the government continue to justify a tax system that tells stay at home parents they are second class citizens?

United Alternative March 1st, 1999

Mr. Speaker, last week nearly 1,600 Canadians from every corner of the country and a variety of partisan backgrounds gathered in the nation's capital to begin the urgent work of replacing this arrogant, top down, tax and spend, health care cutting Liberal regime.

The naysayers said it could not be done, that such a diverse group could not come together around common principles to form a united alternative to Liberal misgovernment. Well, they were wrong.

Delegates opened their minds and focused their eyes firmly on the future, not on the political disputes of the past. They defined the basis for a common sense governing agenda, including balanced budget legislation, debt reduction, real tax relief, Senate reform, direct democracy, end to judge made law, reforming the federation, property rights and real criminal justice reform.

In short, these grassroots Canadians came here in good faith to begin creating a brighter future for the country they love and to end the corrosive effect of one party government.

As the hon. member for York South—Weston, a former Liberal, said, build it and they will come. Last week these Canadians began the exciting work of building this principled united alternative.

Taxation February 19th, 1999

Mr. Speaker, the joke is getting as old as that minister.

A small business teetering on the verge of bankruptcy does not need to hear more rhetoric from this government. It needs tax relief today and not 20 years from now. A small family struggling to get by does not need tax relief 20 years from now. It needs it today. But with bracket creep and the payroll tax increases it will spend more in taxes than it did last year, than it does this year.

Why is this government telling Canadians they will get tax relief when in fact they will end up with less money in their wallets at the end of the day?

Taxation February 19th, 1999

Mr. Speaker, I may not get no satisfaction but at least I am not screwing any taxpayers.

We ought to look at the fine print in this budget to see the real truth. The real truth is this government voted for the largest tax increase in Canadian history, a $10 billion CPP tax grab. It took it effect last month. Hundreds of thousands of Canadians will pay more because of bracket creep.

Why is the finance minister forcing us to pay more taxes and not less after this budget?

United Alternative February 19th, 1999

Mr. Speaker, they are getting worried over there and well they should because today more than 1,500 Canadians from across the land will be gathering here in Ottawa to ad lib on this government.

They will be gathering here to revitalize Canadian democracy. These delegates to the united alternative convention come from a variety of partisan backgrounds but they share a common conviction: that it is time to end the top down, tax and spend, soft on crime, anti-family, patronage ridden, Ottawa knows best, arrogant misgovernment of this Liberal regime.

These delegates know the Liberals won 100% of the power with only 38% of the vote in the last election, the smallest plurality ever to result in a majority government. They know they lost the election in eight of the ten provinces. They know they won nearly all of the seats in Ontario with less than half of the vote and Ontarians are now misrepresented by the 101 health care cutting, tax raising Dalmatians opposite.

A growing majority of Canadians want a united alternative and 53% said in today's National Post that they would vote for a united alternative and that—

The Budget February 17th, 1999

Mr. Speaker, once we clear past all the smoke and mirrors accounting and spin from yesterday's budget, what do we find? Surprise, surprise. The taxes of Canadians are actually going up and not down as a result of yesterday's budget. That is because of the minister's annual payroll tax grab and bracket creep.

I have a very simple question. After all the bafflegab is taken out, why are taxes going up by $2.2 billion in this budget instead of down?

Taxation February 10th, 1999

Mr. Speaker, the Reform Party would take every low income senior off the tax rolls who should not be paying taxes today but is because of bracket creep. We would take every low income Canadian off the tax rolls who should not be paying taxes but is because of bracket creep.

How can the minister continue to stand in his place and justify a tax system which taxes people without their even knowing it through this pernicious tax grab called bracket creep?