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Finance  Mr. Speaker, the Liberals are making more expensive promises, but this Prime Minister is not worth the cost after nine years. Worse still, the Bloc Québécois voted to support this Prime Minister's $500 billion in inflationary and centralizing deficits and spending. This has driv

May 6th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Mental Health and Addictions  Mr. Speaker, after nine years, the Prime Minister is not worth the crime, chaos, drugs and disorder. It has now been 10 days and 60 dead British Columbians since the government of that province has asked the Prime Minister to reverse his deadly and radical legalization of crack,

May 6th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Mental Health and Addictions  Mr. Speaker, to find a path forward, the path forward is obvious: ban hard drugs; invest in treatment; and bring our loved ones home, drug-free. That minister claimed last week that she was waiting for the B.C. government to provide information before she could decide on reversi

May 6th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Mental Health and Addictions  Mr. Speaker, the Abbotsford Soccer Association wrote a letter entitled, “A Cry for Change”. Volunteers with the organization have found dirty needles that can puncture innocent children in the playing field. Other B.C. fields have found women raped and overdosed, addicts naked an

May 6th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Housing  Mr. Speaker, today's headlines in Quebec once again show that this Prime Minister is not worth the cost of housing, which has doubled in the nine years since he took office. Quebec's big moving day, July 1, is a disaster waiting to happen. Organizations in Quebec are appealing f

May 6th, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Finance  Mr. Speaker, inflation and higher interest rates are the costs Canadians pay for the spending that the Prime Minister told them was free. It is not free. Nothing is free. Every dollar he spends comes out of the pockets of Canadians directly through taxes or indirectly through inf

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Finance  Mr. Speaker, the Prime Minister is not worth the cost of debt interest. He doubled our national debt, adding more debt than all previous prime ministers combined. Now, we learn in his new budget bill that he is going to seek another $300 billion of debt, money that he would borro

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Finance  Mr. Speaker, we actually have the highest mortgage debt of any country in the G7, and by far. It is higher, as a share of our economy, than the Americans had during the mortgage meltdown. Now, interest rates are higher and families risk losing their homes. Government deficits pus

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

The Budget  Mr. Speaker, the Prime Minister has already doubled the national debt by adding more debt than all the other prime ministers in our history combined, and all with the support of the Bloc Québécois, which, by the way, voted for a $500-billion budget. The Bloc Québécois leader has

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

The Budget  Mr. Speaker, as a result of the Prime Minister's decision to double the national debt, with support from the Bloc Québécois, we are paying $54.1 billion in interest on the debt alone. That is more than we spend on health care. That is the total amount collected in GST. Every time

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

The Budget  Mr. Speaker, families are already living in austerity. The government is living in abundance. The people are poor, the government is rich. The more the government spends, the more Canadians pay. Interest rates are high, and the government's spending and borrowing are driving them

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Housing  Mr. Speaker, that is what the Prime Minister has been saying for nine years, and the results have been doubled rents, doubled mortgage payments and doubled down payments. Just this week, a survey showed that 72% of Canadians who do not own a home believe they never will. Canada

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Housing  Mr. Speaker, the Prime Minister did turn it around. Obviously, nine years is too long for him because he is starting to attribute to the previous government words he said himself. He was the one who said the federal government is not responsible for housing construction or afford

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Housing  Mr. Speaker, two years ago, after having doubled the rent, doubled mortgage payments and doubled the needed down payment for a home, the Prime Minister promised, in his budget, that he would double home building. Here we are, two years later, and homebuilding is down 8%. His hous

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative

Housing  Mr. Speaker, the only thing it does not do is build homes. Since the Prime Minister made the most recent promise, in 2022, to double housing construction, the number of builds is actually down and is expected to continue to drop, next year and the year after that, according to hi

May 1st, 2024House debate

Pierre PoilievreConservative