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  • Her favourite word is even.

Conservative MP for Cloverdale—Langley City (B.C.)

Won her last election, in 2025, with 48% of the vote.

Statements in the House

Bail and Sentencing Reform Act November 18th, 2025

Mr. Speaker, the Minister of Public Safety just received a letter from the Surrey police today. I would like to quote it:

Surrey is one of the fastest-growing cities in Canada.... What we are now facing—a significant extortion crisis that has emerged in just a few short years—demands swift, decisive, and collective action. No Canadian should live in fear....

It says, “We therefore respectfully request an urgent meeting [between] City of Surrey, local federal and provincial leadership, and senior leadership from all over the Lower Mainland”.

This is a crisis that has not been dealt with, and this is from the Surrey police.

Bail and Sentencing Reform Act November 18th, 2025

Mr. Speaker, I would like to call attention to a letter that the public safety minister, Mr. Anandasangaree, just received—

Bail and Sentencing Reform Act November 18th, 2025

Mr. Speaker, it is time to speak plainly today, because families in Surrey and across Canada deserve the plain truth, not another round of empty words from Ottawa. Over the past months, as I have met with business owners and families across Surrey, Cloverdale, Clayton and Langley City, the conversations have been sobering. Everywhere I go, people lower their voices, look over their shoulder and tell me the same thing: “Tamara, we don't feel safe anymore.”

Not long ago, I hosted a small business round table in my office with several local business owners. One of them runs a handful of small restaurants in Surrey, family-run places where the food is good, the staff knows people's names and the community keeps them alive. He sat across from me, hands folded the way people do when they are trying to stay composed, and I asked him how things were going. He took a moment and said that staff had been followed to their cars, that they had had threats, that they were watching the parking lot instead of customers and that this was not how he wanted to run his business.

He was not angry, nor dramatic; he was simply describing the quiet fear that has settled over too many hard-working families in our community, families that came here believing Canada was safe, stable and full of opportunity. He was sad, and that should trouble every single one of us, because what he described is not normal. It is not the Canada that we built. It is not the future we intend to hand down to our children and grandchildren.

Surrey is facing something no community should ever face. We have seen extortion-related shootings at banquet halls, restaurants, insurance offices and family homes. We have seen respected businessmen murdered. We have seen houses shot at twice in the same week because criminals felt confident enough to return. In neighbourhoods like Cloverdale, neighbourhoods that once symbolized calm, quiet and safety, families are now installing cameras, reinforcing doors and staying home instead of accepting invitations to birthdays and family gatherings. This is not how Canadians should live.

When the Liberal government introduced Bill C-14, people hoped that Ottawa had finally woken up and wanted to fix the mess it had created. They hoped this would be the moment the government understood the scale of the crisis: that extortion, gun crime and organized criminal activity were no longer occasional headlines but daily realities for innocent people. They hoped that at the very least, there would be a sign of courage, but hope collapses when leadership fails to show up. Unfortunately, Bill C-14 does not meet this moment. It is not strong enough. It is not decisive enough. It lacks the moral clarity that a government needs when the safety of its people is on the line.

To understand why we need to look at how we got here. Criminals in this country have learned that there is very little to fear from our justice system. They have learned that punishment is often shockingly lenient. They have learned that the federal government's reforms over the past decade have tilted the balance away from holding criminals accountable toward releasing criminals faster than police can file the paperwork.

The principle of restraint, the rule that police and courts must favour release on the least strict bail conditions, remains intact. Bill C-14 would not remove it. That principle may sound gentle and humane, but in reality it tells violent offenders that the justice system is more concerned about their comfort than our safety.

Mandatory minimum penalties, the clearest signal a country can send that violent crime will not be tolerated, were dismantled by the government in 2022 with Bill C-5. What Canadians need to know today is that Bill C-14 would not restore them, not one. As a result, there is no certainty in sentencing, no clarity and no firm line drawn in the sand.

Worse still, crimes involving firearms, robberies, drug trafficking and even extortion can still be punished with house arrest, not with real jail time and not in a secure facility. This is house arrest in the very neighbourhoods where the victims live. It is impossible to overstate the danger of such a system.

I do not say this lightly: The criminals orchestrating these extortion networks understand our laws better than most members of Parliament. They understand the loopholes. They understand that even if they are caught, the consequences may be minimal. They operate with boldness because the law allows them boldness.

Among G7 countries, Canada stands out for how frequent and fast-growing extortion has become in our national crime data. This is a crisis created by Liberal laws putting violent offenders ahead of victims. Let me repeat: This crisis is the direct result of Liberal government choices, and the numbers speak with brutal clarity. Violent crime has risen sharply since 2015. Firearms offences have more than doubled. Extortion has risen at rates that should alarm every elected official in this country. Sexual assaults have increased dramatically, with women paying the highest price for the government's softness.

This brings me to an equally painful truth: Violence against women remains an afterthought in federal justice policy. I have spoken with women here in Surrey, Cloverdale and Langley who are still carrying the trauma of assault. Some cannot sleep. Some avoid certain streets or times of day, and some feel unsafe in their own homes. When they turn to the justice system for protection, they are too often met with leniency for the offender.

Bill C-14 could have changed that. It could have drawn a line so that repeat violent offenders, sexual predators and men who harm women would face serious consequences, but it does not. It would keep in place the same mindset that lets far too many dangerous people slip through the cracks. It would keep the possibility of simple house arrest for violent predators. It would keep the system tilted toward giving offenders second chances while leaving women to manage the fear on their own.

A government that claims to defend women cannot continue to defend the men who harm them. This is why the Conservative position is so different and so necessary. We believe the first duty of any government is to protect its citizens, not to soften the truth and not to sugarcoat a danger that is staring families in the face. Its duty is to protect.

This means restoring mandatory minimum sentences for serious violent crimes, because a society that will not offer consequences has no hope of restoring order. It means ending the era of get-out-of-jail-free cards for violent offenders. The law must defend the innocent before it comforts the guilty. It also means ending house arrest for crimes that were never meant to be served at home. There is nothing compassionate about allowing a violent offender to live steps away from the people he has terrorized. Firm justice is not cruelty; firm justice is protection.

It means strengthening our border and supporting our police, not with announcements but with action. For too long, criminals have smuggled guns into this country faster than the government has responded. For too long, police have been asked to do more with fewer resources. A safe nation requires a government that gives law enforcement every tool it needs, not one that merely stands at a podium promising to do something someday.

Let me close with this. I often think about my grandchildren and the Canada they deserve: a Canada where children pedal their bikes in their neighbourhoods without fear, a Canada where women walk to their cars without hesitation and a Canada where business owners open their doors in the morning without checking the shadows in the parking lot. We can build that Canada again, but we will not build it with timid, half measures or softened legal language. We will build it with clarity, with conviction and with the courage to declare that safety is not optional; it is foundational.

Bill C-14 is not enough. Canadians deserve a justice system that stands up straight, speaks plainly and puts their safety first, not as an afterthought but as the beginning of every decision. We must place public safety at the very top of the law. Nothing should outrank it. We need to restore mandatory jail time for those who use firearms and for those who commit sexual offences. A nation that will not punish these crimes cannot call itself serious about justice.

We have to end the absurd practice of allowing house arrest for robbery, drug trafficking and firearms offences. These are not minor offences. They are acts that tear the fabric of our communities. When a person has shown time and time again that they are violent, the law must begin from a simple position: that they remain behind bars to keep the public safe. These are not radical ideas. They are the minimum standards of a country determined to protect its citizens.

Canadians are resilient and decent, but they are also tired of watching their neighbourhoods grow less safe while Ottawa proposes weak laws.

Public Safety November 18th, 2025

Mr. Speaker, at a time when Canadians are being terrorized in their own neighbourhoods, our globe-trotting Prime Minister jet-setted into B.C. for a carefree stroll down the White Rock Pier, while families in Surrey were barricading their doors and while homes and businesses were being shot up for the second and third times. He took a sunset stroll while gangs told victims to give them five more names of people to extort, or they would be next. It is mind-boggling that he flew out to crack jokes on the pier instead of tackle extortion.

Why will the Liberals not support the Conservative plan to crack down on the extortion crisis?

Committees of the House November 3rd, 2025

Madam Speaker, we are going to reward practical skills, expand apprenticeships and make sure taxpayer-funded education leads to real-world paycheques.

Committees of the House November 3rd, 2025

Madam Speaker, what our young Canadians are facing is a made-in-Ottawa problem. It is not that our young people stopped working hard; it is that the government stopped letting the economy work for them. When it taxes small business owners into the ground, when it buries job creators in red tape and when it makes it easier to open a shop in Texas than in Toronto, the government drives opportunity out of reach.

The Conservatives will fix that. We will unleash the economy so businesses can hire again and young Canadians can finally get that first paycheque, that first start and that first shot at independence.

Committees of the House November 3rd, 2025

Madam Speaker, the challenge we have is that jobs are not matched to needs in all the different ridings, so we will have to work to make sure that we have a balanced immigration system that meets needs and matches them to the jobs out there.

Committees of the House November 3rd, 2025

Madam Speaker, the Conservatives believe that immigration is a blessing, but it needs to be managed responsibly. Right now, the Liberals have lost control. They have flooded the labour market without any plan for housing or credential recognition. We have young Canadians out of work and newcomers with engineering degrees who are driving taxis. It is chaos.

The Conservatives will fix immigration so that skills match jobs, housing matches people and both new and born-and-raised Canadians can thrive again. That is the Canada we promised the world and the one we will rebuild.

Committees of the House November 3rd, 2025

Madam Speaker, I am going to be sharing my time with my colleague from Elgin—St. Thomas—London South.

Do members remember their first job: the smell of the uniform, the feel of depositing their first paycheque and the pride of earning something that was truly theirs? For my generation, that first job was more than just work; it was a rite of passage. It taught us responsibility, discipline and independence. We could not wait to start. We wanted to earn money for our first car or first date, or maybe save for school.

Back then, businesses were eager to take on young people. They saw potential, not risk. Small shops, farms and restaurants hired kids and trained them, and I still remember watching those young faces light up when they realized they were being trusted to do real work.

That is how it used to be. That is how we built strong communities where every young person had a chance to learn, to grow and to start building their future. Unfortunately things have changed drastically over the last 10 years, and unless we act now, it is going to worse before it gets better.

There was a time when every business in town saw hiring young people as part of their duty and their joy. I remember summers when high school kids would line up outside the greenhouse, eager to work. We would give them a chance. We would teach them how to handle tools, how to talk to customers and how to show up on time. It was not glamorous, but it built character and grit. I would see teenagers working at diners, mowing lawns and running deliveries. They were learning the habits that make a society strong: hard work, pride in a job well done, teamwork and respect.

For many small business owners, it was rewarding. They were not just hiring someone; they were mentoring the next generation. Watching a young worker grow into confidence and seeing them save for their first car or their first apartment gave hope for the future, and that is how we built a sense of purpose: one job, one handshake and one lesson at a time. Back then our economy worked in harmony. At the local store, the farm, the trade school and the credit union, everyone played a part.

When young people thrived, the community thrived. When one generation moved up, the next one stepped in, but today these opportunities are drying up, and the next generation is paying the price.

Today our young people are doing everything right but getting nowhere. They are a generation on hold. According to StatsCan, more than 460,000 youth are unemployed. That is nearly 15% of everyone aged 15 to 24, the highest rate we have seen in over a decade, outside the pandemic. For students trying to balance school and work, it is even worse; 17% cannot find a job. In Ontario, over 17,000 young people lost work just last month. Across the country, the youth employment rate has dropped to its lowest level in 25 years.

These numbers represent actual lives on hold: kids moving back home because they cannot afford rent, graduates working jobs that do not use their skills, or young couples putting off marriage or kids because they cannot build stability. Even among young people with post-secondary degrees, one in six is working outside their field. They studied, they borrowed and they worked hard, but still they cannot find a place to belong in this economy.

The Liberal government's economic failure has made life harder at every turn, with higher taxes, higher rent, higher prices and fewer opportunities. While they pat themselves on the back for resilience, families see the truth: Our young people are struggling, not because they lack talent or ambition but because government policies have shut the door on opportunity.

This is not a blip. It is not just a tough year. This is a crisis, and it is one the Liberal government's bad policies have created. If we do not act and act fast, we are not just losing jobs; we are losing an entire generation. When young people cannot find their first foothold, they start falling behind, not just financially but also emotionally. They lose confidence. They start to believe the system is not built for them. We are already seeing record mental health struggles, delayed families, lost skills and an economy that is missing out on the potential of young people.

It is not just their problem; it is also ours. A country that does not make room for its young people is a country losing its future. If we allow this to continue, we will face a generation that is less secure, less optimistic and less connected to the Canada we grew up in. That is not a legacy any of us wants to pass on.

We cannot build tomorrow on unemployment lines. We cannot build families on debt. We cannot even build dreams when the path to success has been blocked by bureaucracy and bad policies. We need to turn this around now.

That is why the Conservatives are putting forward a serious plan, one rooted in common sense, hard work and fairness. I would like to touch on two pillars: unleashing the economy and fixing the broken immigration system.

When I was younger, the local mechanic always had a student sweeping the floors and learning the trade. The diner had teenagers busing tables and saving up for their first car. Every small business in town was proud to give a kid their first start. Today, those jobs are disappearing, not because Canadians do not want to hire, but because it is too expensive to hire. It is too complicated and too uncertain to grown a business in this country anymore.

Under the Liberals, we have seen investment flee overseas, projects get cancelled and small businesses squeezed dry. Red tape has become a growth industry all its own. We need to turn that around.

The Conservatives will repeal the anti-resource laws that have scared away billions of dollars in private investment and shut down entire communities, because the best way to help young Canadians find work is to let our economy work. We will cut taxes to drive reinvestment and job creation, letting employers keep more of what they earn so they can hire again, expand again and believe again. We will slash the mountains of red tape that make it easier to start a business in Texas than in Toronto.

When businesses are free to grow, jobs follow. It is not complicated; it is common sense. We do not need more government transformation strategies or glossy reports written by consultants who have never run a payroll in their lives. We need shovels in the ground, paycheques in pockets and opportunity back on main street. Every new shop that opens, every truck that rolls off the lot and every mine that reopens is a door opening for a young Canadian who just wants a chance. That is what unleashing the economy really means: believing in Canada again.

Let us talk about another piece of the puzzle, immigration. Canada has always been a nation built by newcomers. It is part of who we are. However, immigration has to work for everyone: for those arriving and for those already here trying to build a life. The Liberals have lost control of the system. They have flooded the labour market with no plan for housing and no plan for matching skills to real jobs.

While hundreds of thousands of young Canadians cannot find work, the government is on track to issuing among the highest number on record of temporary foreign worker permits. How can that be possible? It is not fair to the Canadians struggling to find a job, and it is not fair to the newcomers who come here expecting opportunity, only to find chaos. The Conservatives will realign immigration with labour market realities by bringing in the people we actually need to fill genuine shortages, not paper quotas designed to hit political talking points.

We will fix credential recognition so that newcomers trained as doctors, engineers and nurses can work in their professions instead of driving taxis, while our hospitals and job sites go short-staffed. When we match skills with need, everybody wins. Young Canadians get a fair chance to start their careers, and new Canadians get the respect and opportunity they came here for. That is the Canadian bargain, or at least it used to be. We intend to bring it back.

This is how we restore confidence in our economy. It is by trusting Canadians again, by giving business owners the freedom to grow and by treating workers, both new and born and raised here, with fairness and respect. If we unleash the economy and fix immigration, we will open the floodgates of opportunity. Young Canadians will not have to leave their hometowns or move back in with their parents just to survive. They will finally have that first chance to work, to save, to build and to start living.

This country was never meant to hold its young people back; it was built to lift them up. Every young person deserves to believe that their hard work still pays off and that the future still belongs to them. We can fix this. We can rebuild an economy where every teenager, every student and every young graduate gets that first chance, and where our kids can save for their first car, their first home and their own family someday. That is the Canada we grew up in and that is the Canada we owe them.

I have to ask this of the government: When will it stop making excuses, stop burying our youth under red tape and debt, and start giving them the same shot at success that built this country in the first place? The next generation is not asking for a handout; it is asking for a fair chance.

The Economy November 3rd, 2025

Mr. Speaker, Cloverdale's Maurizio Zinetti runs a Canadian-owned company that is doing everything right: feeding families, employing Canadians and doing whatever he can to keep affordable food on our tables. However, thanks to the Liberals' new front-of-package labelling rules, regulations that have nothing to do with food safety, he is now facing a $2.2-million compliance bill.

Across the industry, the cost will top $100 million. Prices are going to rise and contracts are being cancelled, all because of red tape politics.

Will the Prime Minister stop trying to engineer a costly election on a costly budget and instead scrap the costly labelling tax?