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  • His favourite word is food.

Conservative MP for Carleton (Ontario)

Won his last election, in 2021, with 50% of the vote.

Statements in the House

Privilege December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, it is such a tough question; I almost did not want to stand up and answer it for a second there. It is a big mess. It is an incredible mess the Prime Minister will leave behind when he takes a run, and I understand that might happen any minute, as carbon tax Carney is lining up. We almost wonder if carbon tax Carney planned it all this way. He is the top economic adviser. He pushed all of these extra spending measures on the former finance minister and then she objected to the crazy $62-billion deficit. She is out now. The Prime Minister might soon be out. Who will walk up? Well, carbon tax Carney will, taking the wheel of the bus after he helped crash it.

He not the only one. There is also the getaway car. Who has been driving the getaway car? It is the NDP leader. Today, he said the Prime Minister should resign. However, just days ago he voted to keep the Prime Minister exactly where he is. It is time for the NDP leader to state clearly that not only has he lost confidence in the Prime Minister, but he is prepared to vote non-confidence or take any other legal steps necessary to to express non-confidence in the Prime Minister in order to trigger a carbon tax election as soon as possible.

Privilege December 16th, 2024

I would be happy to talk about jobs, Mr. Speaker. My first job here was to help pass the Federal Accountability Act to crack down on the corruption that we have seen on the Liberal side. I then helped cut the GST so that Canadians could save when they made every single consumer purchase; it was cut from 7% to 6% to 5%. I worked with former prime minister Harper to help balance the budget and rebuild the military so that we would have necessary equipment to help destroy al Qaeda after the attacks of 9/11. I helped deliver the lowest inflation of any government in 40 years, leaving behind a balanced budget and the best balance sheet of any government in the G7.

In fact, it turns out that the job experience I have is best aligned with the job that I promise to do. Now let us bring it home.

Privilege December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, the member wants me to tell the truth about the permanent tax change. There is a permanent tax change he has supported, which is to jack up the carbon tax on absolutely everything. He has voted to quadruple that tax to an eyewatering 61¢ a litre that would literally grind our economy to a halt. It would take food off grocery shelves, take parts out of factories and shut down the farm vehicles that bring us our food. It would be a nuclear winter if the tax increase that he has voted to legislate into place ever happens. That is why we need a carbon tax election: so that I can axe the tax.

Privilege December 16th, 2024

We have a tax trick that will cost more to administer than it will save anybody, that many vendors are not even implementing and that will be gone before it starts. The NDP member has—

Privilege December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, I find it incredible that, even when there is no Liberal minister willing to defend the temporary two-month GST tax trick, the NDP is there to defend it for them.

Privilege December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, absolutely everything is broken today, and 70-plus per cent of Canadians agree with me on that. The borders are broken. There are half a million people here illegally, according to the government's own documents. The immigration system is broken. We now have refugee camps, something we only used to see in third world countries. They are being set up across our country in formerly tranquil and peaceful suburbs. The drugs and disorder have broken our communities. We have lost more people to drug overdoses in the last nine years than died fighting for Canada in the Second World War.

Absolutely everything is broken after nine years of the pathetic Prime Minister, who is hiding under his desk right now.

Privilege December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, I must admit that I am shocked to be rising in the House of Commons to announce this government's deficit. Usually, the Liberals would be the ones to announce the deficit in their economic update. However, they came to the House of Commons to table an economic update without even wanting to give a speech about it. They do not even have a finance minister who is brave enough to talk about it. He is hiding at Rideau Hall rather than doing his job.

There were three finance ministers today. The former minister of finance and deputy prime minister stepped down. Right after that, the Minister of Industry automatically became the finance minister under cabinet's system of delegation. He immediately announced that he, too, was resigning because he did not want to take responsibility for the country's finances given what he had just learned about them. The Minister of Public Safety, who was responsible for securing our broken borders in light of the U.S. president-elect's tariff threats, has now become the Minister of Finance.

However, he is nowhere to be found. His whereabouts are a great mystery. What is no longer a mystery, however, is the staggering size of the deficit. We were promised that the federal deficit would not surpass the $40-billion guardrail. The reality is that the deficit has reached $62 billion. That is 55% higher than promised eight months ago. It is out of control.

I will give the former finance minister credit for seeing, a few months ago, just how dangerous this government's deficit was. It was threatening to increase inflation, slowing interest rate cuts, jeopardizing our social programs and slowing our economic growth. That is why she said there would be a red line to prevent the deficit from going beyond $40 billion. It was a guardrail. Guardrails prevent buses from falling off cliffs.

Then the Prime Minister took the wheel. He pulled to the left. He hit the guardrail. The bus is now falling off the cliff and is at the bottom of the ravine in a big pile of debt that threatens the future of Canadians. That is why, today, we are announcing that we are going to vote against this plan. We are calling on the NDP do its job, for once, and vote in favour of a non-confidence motion on this out-of-control, corrupt and costly government. We need an election. That is what we need.

Here is an astonishing fact. My grandfather came to Canada from Ireland. Why? Because Ireland was poor. Today, Ireland is twice as rich as Canada. It has a GDP per capita of $100,000. Ours is $50,000. Although they have no oil or natural resources and lack the huge advantage of living next to the United States, which has the largest economy in the world, the Irish are now twice as rich as we are because they made good decisions. I was told that there are only two kinds of people in the world: Irish people and people who want to be Irish. From an economic perspective, that is true.

Ireland reduced taxes, cut the red tape to speed up big projects, and opened its economy to give entrepreneurs economic freedom and to reduce the size of government. The Government of Ireland costs 23% of the country's economy. Here, it costs more than 40%. When the Irish government was cut in half, the wealth of its citizens doubled.

We know what to do. We need to break down all the barriers that governments have put in place. We need to cut back on bureaucracy, consultants and corporate nonsense, which is a big waste of money. We need to reduce deficits and taxes, eliminate red tape, and allow freedom of competition and open-mindedness. This will let us generate bigger paycheques that people will bring home to invest in their communities. That will let us lower inflation and taxes and have a dollar that keeps its value.

That is what we are going to do to fight the threat that future President Trump and his tariffs pose. We are going to bring investment back to Canada to build things and to become the freest economy in the world and the richest people in the world. That should be our goal.

Enough with the chaos, division, poverty, homelessness and misery caused by the NDP-Liberal socialist government. Now we need to get back to the principle of common sense, the basic principle. We are going to bring home the promise that anyone, no matter where they come from, can work hard and fulfill their dreams, that people can earn a big paycheque or pension so they can pay for affordable food and housing in a safe community. That is what common sense means. That is what we are going to do to put Canada first.

I rise today, flabbergasted by the news that has just been made public. The government has finally revealed its true deficit number. Let us remember, the finance minister, this outgoing and now former finance minister told the world that she was putting in place guardrails to limit the damage that her deficits could do. Her deficit plan was $40 billion, a mind-bogglingly large number, that was already contributing to rekindling inflation, again.

This $40 billion was too big. It was out of control, as it was. However, at least to her credit, she said, “No more than that.” She decided she would have a guardrail. We know a guardrail is meant to stop vehicles from flying off cliffs. She was trying throughout the year to avoid going off the cliff.

There were two people on the bus who had other ideas, the Prime Minister and carbon tax Carney. The two of them went to the front of the bus, they grabbed the wheel, they pulled it sharply to the left, smashing into that guardrail, and she tried to resist. They pulled even further to the left, and they stepped on the gas. The bus flew off the cliff, and now Canadians are at the bottom of the ravine in a big pile of debt.

However, instead of taking responsibility, the Prime Minister told her that she should take all the blame. That when the ambulances, the police cruisers and the fire department arrived, she should take the blame for running the bus off the cliff, and that carbon tax Carney and the Prime Minister could innocently sit back. The Prime Minister could then put carbon tax Carney in charge of driving the next bus. The good old boys in the back room would protect themselves and make the then-finance minister take all the blame.

It reminds us of the way they treated the former Attorney General, a brilliant and brave first nations woman who refused to kowtow to corruption. It reminds us of the way the Liberals treated Jane Philpott and so many other brave women who have dared question the self-described feminist Prime Minister. Indeed, some feminist he is, throwing the bus off the cliff and throwing women under the bus. That is his real record.

His real record on finance is yet another $62-billion deficit. For context, outside the current government, no government in the history of Canada has ever run a $62-billion deficit. Not even in the nineties, when The Wall Street Journal said we were a third world basket case, and not even during the massive global economic crisis did the deficit come anywhere close to that, yet here we are.

With the global economy growing, with the American economy booming in stable times, this deficit is 100% at the feet of the irresponsible Prime Minister and his personal economic adviser, carbon tax Carney. Now Carney says he does not even want the job of finance minister. He does not even want to try to drive the crashed-out bus after he helped run it off the cliff. The Liberals could not find anyone all day. In fact, no one will appear today to defend this incredible disaster of a budget.

We can look at the consequences in human terms: We have 1,400 homeless camps in Ontario and 35 homeless encampments in Halifax alone. Two million people are lined up at food banks. Scurvy is making a comeback. The government admits that one in four children is going to school hungry every single day. Unemployment is rising and, according to the budget, expected to exceed 7% by the end of next calendar year. The gap between per capita GDP in Canada and the U.S. is now 30,000 Canadian dollars, although it was equal 10 years ago. This is the worst gap since at least the Second World War, and some say it is the worst gap in a century.

Canadian workers are only getting 55¢ of investment for every dollar an American worker gets. A half a trillion Canadian investment dollars, which works out to almost a quarter of our economy, has left, net. It has gone to the United States to build pipelines, factories, warehouses and business centres; Canadian investment dollars are paying American wages while our workers go starving for investment and for salaries to pay their bills.

When I travel across this country, I consistently meet two types of people. There are those who are a little better off. I will be very blunt about this. They tell me that if I do not win, they will leave the country. They are very numerous. I do not worry about them as much. Do members know whom I worry about? I worry about the ones who cannot leave. Using very blunt language, they are the ones who tell me, “I don't know what the hell I'm going to do. I have no idea how I'm going to pay my way.”

I met a waitress at a restaurant not long ago. She came up to me, grabbed me by the hand and said that I have to win. I thanked her and said that I appreciated her support. She said, no, it was not a compliment. Then she told me her story. She was working one full-time job and two part-time jobs just to pay her bills. This is a single woman in her late fifties, and she was tired of working all the time. She had cut everything out of her budget, every creature comfort and everything she enjoyed about her life, so that she could drop one of those part-time jobs. One morning, she woke up, walked outside and her car was gone. She called her insurance, and they said they were not going to cover the replacement value. She had to take that job back because she simply cannot live her life without a car.

Colleagues can bet their bottom dollar that the guy who stole the car was probably out on bail. This was not his first job. This woman's taxes and heating bill have gone up. Her wages have not gone up. She is scared to go out in the streets, in places where they did not even lock the door not long ago. These are the people we are fighting for.

These silly games over here are very entertaining, as is the soap opera that everyone is seized with today. That is all fine, but there are real people whose lives are on the line. We have a duty to work for them.

Quite frankly, this woman does not see me or any of us as any kind of saviour. They see us all as a last hope. In fact, she does not want to be saved; she just wants her life back. She was taking care of herself just fine before her tax, her heat and her grocery bill went through the roof and her car went missing. She was doing everything right.

I met a guy at the Labatt brewery a few days ago, and members can watch the video of me talking with him. He walked up to me and said he works three jobs, but his family cannot make it. They are renting. They have no hope. They have given up on ever owning a home. They can barely make it. He said to me that he feels ashamed when he talks to his kids because they ask why he is never around and why they can never have a house. He feels like a failure.

He did not fail. He has been failed. He has been robbed of the promise of Canada. It was a very simple promise: If we worked hard, we got a good life. It was not fancy or extravagant, but we got a house with a yard, where we could have kids playing safely. We could have a nice dog that we could afford to feed, along with the kids. Our kids could play safely in the streets. That was the promise.

Politicians break promises all the time, but do we know what was bad about this promise? This promise did not belong to the Prime Minister. It was not his promise to break. It belonged to all of us. Our purpose is to bring home that promise for that young man, that young father, and that older female worker, so that they can take back control of their lives once again and live in a safe country where their hard work earns them a good wage, where the rent and food are affordable and where, when they go to bed at night, they know that they will be safe throughout their sleep and that they will have their car in their driveway in the morning. Our purpose is to have a country where people are proud to fly the flag again, where they know that the government is a servant and not a master and where they understand that the Commons, this place, works for the common people every day, not for the ego of one man desperate to cling to his job.

We must remember that we are servants in this place. We have a job to do on behalf of the people who sent us here. Our personal dramas are not important. The dramas that should seize all of our concern and imagination are the daily dramas of the working women and men who build this country. We are in it for them. We are going to give them control of their lives back in the freest country on earth, Canada. Let us bring it home.

Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, the NDP leader is absolutely right: This cannot continue; the Prime Minister cannot go on like this. Housing costs have doubled. Food bank use has doubled. The debt has doubled. Gun crime has doubled, and now we face troubling tariff threats from a President-elect who can see weakness coming from a mile away. The Prime Minister must leave this job, but there is only one person who can remove him, and that is the leader of the NDP.

Will he put the country ahead of his pension and vote for a carbon tax election now?

Finance December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, just to underline the chaos we are faced with here, the former finance minister resigned the day she was to present the fall budget, which was going to contain a massive deficit overrun. The job then went automatically to the industry minister, who immediately resigned, like, on the spot. It then went down the line to the next person in order, the famous two Randys, and they are not available to do the job either. We are now less than two hours away from the fall economic update.

Why will the Prime Minister not have the courage to come in here, to present it himself, and to put it to a confidence vote tonight?

Finance December 16th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, that was a serious question. Who is the finance minister?

After the former finance minister resigned this morning, the Minister of Industry automatically became the minister of finance. I congratulate him for that. However, he immediately resigned. According to the established hierarchy, the position then reverted to the two Randys. They do not want the job either. Now, we have no minister of finance minutes before the economic update is to be presented.

Where is the minister of finance?