The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - Pierre Poilievre: What I Want to Build (and Break) To Fix Canada
Episode Date: April 13, 2025Pierre Poilievre, leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, reveals a roadmap for restoring opportunity and unity across the country. From unleashing innovation by cutting red tape, to reigniting upwar...d mobility and building a powerhouse economy, Poilievre’s message goes beyond borders. If you care about restoring opportunity, strengthening democracy, and securing a brighter future for North America, listen closely—Canada’s solutions might just inspire America’s renewal. TRANSCRIPT EN: https://fs.blog/knowledge-project-podcast-transcripts/pierre-poilievre-223/ FR: https://fs.blog/knowledge-project-podcast-transcripts/pierre-poilievre-223-francaise/ (01:41) Headline vs Reality (03:55) From Opposition Party to Unifier (07:05) Parenthood Shapes Priorities (10:05) Differentiating from the Liberals (15:04) Economic Value Creation in Canada (18:08) WEF Opposition Stance (25:27) Balanced Budget Plan (28:15) Attracting Investments (35:25) Productivity Gap Explained (38:50) Tariffs Response Tactics (41:10) Reducing US Dependency (44:15) Interprovincial Trade Impacts (45:40) "China” (47:42) Media Accountability Challenges (51:42) Digital Free Speech Protections (55:10) Crime (01:02:00) Access to Health Care (01:06:15) A modern and effective Canadian military (01:11:10) AI: balance innovation with protection (01:12:49) How do we ensure that the government can be held accountable in a world where they might control information flow? (01:14:10) Trust in government post-COVID (01:15:56) Climate change (01:18:50) Biggest misconceptions about Mr. Poilievre (01:19:50) What Canadian success looks like Thanks to ShipStation for supporting this episode: Get a 60-day free trial at www.shipstation.com/knowledgeproject. Newsletter - The Brain Food newsletter delivers actionable insights and thoughtful ideas every Sunday. It takes 5 minutes to read, and it’s completely free. Learn more and sign up at fs.blog/newsletter Upgrade — If you want to hear my thoughts and reflections at the end of our episode, join our membership: fs.blog/membership and get your own private feed. Watch on YouTube: @tkppodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is a special bonus episode of the Knowledge Project featuring Pierre Polyev,
the leader of the Conservative Party of Canada and leader of the official opposition.
I've always avoided politics on the platform, but lately I've been frustrated,
not as a partisan, but as a citizen.
Political conversations around the world have become nothing but angry soundbites and gutcha moments.
We've lost the ability to explore complex issues with nuance and good faith.
This isn't just a Canadian problem.
everywhere. So I decided to do something about it, even if it's just a small step. With that in
mind, I've invited both of the leading candidates to the Canadian election on the show. They've both
said yes, but only one is yet to record. Whether you follow North American politics closely or
just catch the headlines, our conversation explores issues that affect your daily life. We dig
into why prices keep rising, how tariffs impact your wallet, the real effects of immigration on policy,
what's happening with health care, and even how AI is reshaping society.
These aren't just political talking points.
They're the forces shaping our future.
I want to point out that these questions were not provided in advance,
and no editorial control was given to the candidates' team.
I also want to point out that our editing for the episode is incredibly minimal and nothing of substance.
We're back to our regular programming Tuesday with an incredible episode on AI
with OpenAI chairman and Sierra founder Brett Taylor.
It's time to listen and learn.
Pierre, welcome to the show.
Great to be here.
Thanks for having me.
Many Canadians know you from the headlines
that often compare you to Trump to focus on conflicts.
But your friends and family describe you
as caring husband and father
and someone deeply committed to serving Canada.
What do you want voters to know about you that doesn't make the headlines?
You know, being opposition leader, by definition, requires that you fight a lot.
I mean, it's two sword lengths apart in the House of Commons,
and the system is deliberately adversarial so that you can hold government to account.
But I think it's important for people to know what I'm fighting for.
And what I really want is to give everyone the same chance I had.
you know i was i started from very humble beginnings um i was adopted by a couple of school
teachers in calgary and and yet i've been able to make it here and uh the story is the same for
my wife she came here as a refugee from venezuela and uh she's been able to have a great life as
has her family and uh we believe in that we believe that this is a country where you can
start anywhere and get anywhere so uh that's what really most
motivates me. That's my purpose in politics. That's my why. And if there was one thing that I
want people to know about me, as they consider their decision, it's why I'm doing this, why I do
what I do. Then you can get into all the specific policies about how you get there. But that's really
what pushes me forward and gets me out of bed in the morning to do this job. Do you think the
comparison to Trump is fair? No, I don't think so. I don't, I mean, we don't really sure anything
in common. I mean, he comes from an extremely privileged background. He, you know, he was born into
a very wealthy millionaire family and I was born in very humble beginnings. There's a lot of
policies that he has that I disagree with. And I think I'm distinctively Canadian in my
outlook and in my goals. So I don't really see the comparison. And I'm a Canadian. I'm Pierre
Pauliev. I'm no one else. I'm just me.
You mentioned being the head of the opposition and the adversarial role that that necessarily entails.
As the leader of the country, you have to unite everybody.
How do you envision doing that?
Well, it's a big job.
I mean, I think right now people are more divided than ever in Canada.
And I think it's a bit by design.
The government of the day is sought to divide people in order to stay in power.
and I think that's the wrong approach.
We need to unite people around what I call the Canadian promise,
make everyone feel like they can achieve something in this country
by being part of the community and by working hard.
That's what's missing right now.
I also think we have to get away from identity politics,
which divides people based on their group origins
and separates them into categories.
The reason why we haven't had big sectarian divisions in Canada
is because we did we judge them as people as individuals on their personal character and conduct
rather than you know their gender their race their religion which has increasingly become a
vogue approach by you know the the modern progressive left i think the opposite approach is better
i think it's better to treat everyone like an individual and give them a chance we should um
we should stop the divisions that we see between different groups
And basically, so look, you're Canadian first.
If you come to Canada, sure, bring your culture,
bring your language, your food, your traditions,
but the problems from abroad have to stay at home.
We bring here a place where we leave all that behind
and unite for our flag.
We always thought of that as assimilation when I was growing up, right?
So welcome people, but also assimilating into our culture.
Have we forgotten that?
I think there's been, I think the government has tried to encourage people to divide into different camps
and that has metastasized onto our streets with these horrible protests that target Jewish
places of worship and schools and businesses.
And I think that's wrong.
I mean, we've always had immigrants from the Middle East and they never thought they never, that
never led to any kind of violence or firebomings of places of worship. They might have debated
if they were in a university class together, but it never went beyond that. And I think lately
there's been this emphasis on dividing people into different categories. And what you naturally
get as a result is a lot of hostility, group-based hostility and even violence. And I think
we need to put an end to that. I think everybody can keep their own cultural traditions. I think
that's fine.
But at the end of the day, we're Canadian first, above all or other identities.
And every single person should be judged based on what their conduct is, not where they
came from or where their grandfather or grandmother was born.
Has becoming a parent changed what you think is important for the future of Canada?
Yes, it has.
We have two great kids.
We've got a little cruise.
He's three years old.
He's very ambitious.
curious,
inquisitive,
and I know that he's going to do great,
whatever he does.
I think he'll be a merchant or something.
He likes to trade.
He wants something from you.
He'll pick something else up
and bring it over and offer it as a trade.
So maybe he'll be a commodities trader or something.
And then Little Valentina,
she has some special needs.
She's six years old and she's nonverbal right now.
And so she has a hard time
communicating with us and and but we we've learned to to take her cues and and really celebrate the
the raw authenticity that she has she's um she's totally real like what you see is what you get
and that's what i love about her um she has none of the you know the games that people play
to put on an air of this or that feeling she's just like you get exactly what she's what's inside her
is what comes out of her and um what's special about that is when she gives you that burst of love it's
like really powerful but i i also think about like what's going to what's her life going to be like
how is she going to how is she going to pay her bills when she's older what what what uh what will her
what her life look like when she's 60 and um i probably won't be around by then i was a very i was a late
bloomer i think it was 39 when we had her so when she's up in her years i i won't be there so i think
about how do we build up a nest egg for her so that she can have a good life?
And then I think about a lot of other families that are perhaps not as fortunate as us
who have a child with a disability.
How do they pay their bills?
So I think it's given me a lot more empathy to the different challenges and hardships
that families have to fight through.
There's a lot going on in everybody's world and we really see what goes on in our world.
That's right.
Yeah, that's true.
So I think having kids and experiencing some of those challenges, it helps you to empathize with other people who are out there and fighting their own battles.
I know being a single parent, some nights I go to bed and I'm like, I don't even know how I survived today.
Yeah.
Or how I did it?
And then I look at other people.
I'm like, how do they do it?
How many kids do you have?
I have two, 15 and 14.
Okay.
They go to school nearby?
Yeah.
Okay, so you don't have to show for too much or do they have sports?
Well, that's why we moved here is just so we can reduce kids.
commuting time. Okay. So they could walk to school. Do they have sports as well? Well, they have
extracurriculars with the school. So, like, between that and homework, they're pretty wiped.
Like, wow, they're getting 90 minutes a night, usually have homework. That's a lot of homework.
That's a no knowledge. But they're doing it. Yeah, well, most of the days. That's important.
You've been campaigning against the liberals for years. And to many voters now, the promises sound very
similar on carbon tax, crime, energy, and investment. So how are you different now?
Well, to the extent that they are the same at all, the difference is sincerity, because I've been
saying the exact same thing the whole time. And they've been, in the last two months,
they've adopted pale imitations of my policies to try and kind of trick people into thinking
they're getting conservative policies by voting liberal. But,
Well, it's on the carbon tax, for example, the liberals have not gotten rid of the carbon tax that they brought in.
They've just made it disappear from the gas pumps through a regulatory command that they can easily reverse if they're reelected.
The law is still in place, and they do admit they want to increase it on Canadian industry, which I think will be extremely destructive, given that we're already in a trade dispute with our biggest market, where there is no such carbon.
tax. So I will get rid of the entire tax for everyone and for real. Well, let's go with
investment. Mr. Carney wants to keep C-69. This is the no development law. Like all the major
businesses that do development say that this law will strangle their ability to dig mines, build
pipelines, LNG plans, they just won't happen with this law in place. So while he makes a lot of
kind of hints that he might like to speed things up when you actually look at the things you need
to do to achieve that he's against them all he wants to keep c69 he's not prepared to commit to
six month of permitting he won't get rid of the industrial carbon tax he wants to keep the energy
cap in place which doesn't exist in the states i want to get rid of that so on on the specifics
of what we actually get done the differences are actually very stark on the sort of marketing
side. He's tried to adopt similar words to trick people into thinking they're getting my policies
by voting for him. So that's ultimately it. I think if we go, if the liberals are reelected,
you will see a continued outpour of investment to the United States. You will see that we do not
build LNG plants, pipelines, or any other self-reliance projects that will break our dependence
on America. So I really want to unleash enterprise in this country. We can do it. We can
bring our money home. We can make this the fastest place in the OECD to get building permits.
We can have lower taxes on investment. One idea that I think a lot of your listeners would find
interesting is that I want to pass what I call the Canada First reinvestment tax cut, zero capital
gains when you reinvest in Canada. So if you're building homes or you're opening a business
or buying a CNC machine or a 3D printer, a conveyor belt with the money here in Canada,
then you get that tax deferral.
But if you take the money out of Canada, you don't.
So you think of a guy selling a business after 40 years.
Right now there's no incentive for him to keep it in Canada.
His incentive is to put it abroad where there's lower taxes.
This would mean that he'd have a massive tax deferral advantage if he reinvested the money in Canada.
it would also mean companies that are already invested abroad
would have a tax-free way to bring the money back.
I think this is going to be a real rocket fuel for our economy.
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Let's dive into the economy a little bit
because when I talk to people who maybe work in government or they're older,
they don't necessarily understand how natural resources go into fulfilling an economy.
So how do we create economic value as a nation and then translate that into a better life for all Canadians?
How would you explain that to somebody?
Well, if you're not working in the natural resource sector, you might say, well, why do I care about this sector?
Well, the answer, first and foremost, is it is our single biggest export sector.
So when we're selling more of our raw materials or better yet value added to them and then selling them,
it brings our dollar up, which means we have more purchasing power.
And that means we have a higher quality of life and standard of living.
Secondly, they pay, these resource companies pay an absolutely enormous amount of tax.
So if they are firing all cylinders, it means that that you're,
kids when they graduate, they won't have to pay as much for the roads and hospitals and schools
because it will be paid for by a booming resource sector, which is probably the biggest,
if you combine the resource industries, they are the biggest by far. And then all of the people
who work for them, they too pay taxes and eat at local restaurants and feed into our overall
economy. So without our resource economy, we would be an economic ruin. That's,
happening slowly it's kind of like we're the the frog in the warming water but every year we get
poorer and poorer but we can reverse that as soon as we want decline is a choice it's not my choice
my choice is to unlock the power of our resources to make this the fastest place to get a permit
to reward first nations by helping them have a stake in the royalty revenue that comes out of
these projects and to train up you know 350,000 young people to fill the
trades jobs. And they're incredible jobs. Like often people see someone in work boots and a hard hat.
They say, well, that's a tough maybe, maybe he's making a 30, 40 grand. These jobs can be
$200,000 a year. So let's train up the young tradespeople to fill those jobs. So we could
become the richest country in the world. Do you think we could ever get to a point where we had no
income tax? If we really enriched our natural resources? Well, of course, income tax were only
temporary to pay for World War I.
So we saw how that worked out.
I can't make that promise.
I'd love to.
They definitely make some headlines if I promised that right now.
But we definitely need lower income tax.
I call income tax the fine we pay for the crime of hard work.
Every time you go out and put in a little more effort, you get punished more.
So I'm committing to lower income tax by 15% on the average worker and senior.
And, you know, as our financial situation improves, I'd like,
like to lower them even more.
One of the differences between you and your opponent, Mr. Kearney, is you've said no to the
W.EF, whereas he's heavily integrated into that.
Why do you have such strong feelings on that?
And how does that impact everyday Canadians?
I just think it's an organization that has a very top-down mentality.
I don't believe in top-down.
I don't believe that there's this sort of group of,
globetrotting experts that can tell us how to live our lives that can you know who can tell us which
industry should go up and which should go down what cars we should drive and what words we should
speak and how our money should be spent i really believe in distributed decision making
um personal freedom um letting people live their own lives and chart their own course
the other thing i've found is that i mean i've been around politics a long time so i've met a lot
these people who are considered part of the elite and I talk to them and I ask them questions
and then I go out to my constituency and I talk to truck drivers and mechanics and farmers.
And I find the latter group is actually smarter. Now, they don't use all the same fancy language.
But if you ask them just sort of nuts and bolts type questions, they're smarter.
Like, you know, Mr. Carney, for example, told us in 2021, don't worry about inflation.
there won't be any inflation we should print even more money well he was totally wrong like utterly wrong
you know it's a jaw-dropping mistake and with huge human consequences um in my writing when the when the
money printing started the quantitative easing i was getting farmers and small business owners saying
there's going to be inflation there's going to be inflation yeah so how is it these people who
don't attend lectures and don't go to international summits
knew more about the real functioning of the economy
than all of these so-called experts.
What I think is we need a government that's humble
and leaves people their money, their freedom of choice,
control of their lives,
and lets them make their own decisions.
And that's my philosophical difference
with that group and and it's some i believe in the common people i think when you say that what a lot
of people might hear is well that means cutting services and um that would have an impact on lower
income families so can you share how a free market approach would help our economy will still
protecting vulnerable communities well i don't see those two things being at juxtaposition what we
have seen first of all i'm going to protect all of the
social safety net we have, particularly for the most vulnerable.
But what we see is that when government grows beyond a basic social safety net,
it actually doesn't benefit low-income people.
It starts to massively transfer wealth from the working class to the extremely rich.
And this is sort of the irony that the, you know, I always say like to say, Robin Hood has been
kidnapped.
And in reality, Robin Hood was fighting against taxes.
he wasn't fighting for a bigger government to take from the working people to give to the aristocrats,
which is what we, I think, increasingly see.
For example, the government's now spending $21 billion on consultants.
That's twice what they was spending 10 years ago.
Are these consultants, waitresses and welders?
No, they're very high-priced, extremely wealthy people, often getting paid to do work of little or no value.
$21 billion for context is $1,400 for every Canadian family.
So we're not talking about small sums of money.
Look at what happened when the government printed money over the last four years.
It decimated the poor.
Poverty went up.
Now 25% of people are in poverty.
Food bank lineups increased by over 100%.
One and four of our kids is going to school undernourished.
When the government spends money it does not have.
it drives enormous inflation, and that always hurts the poorest people.
The rich are not only inflation proof, they're inflation positive.
They benefit, you know, Mr. Carney's CEO, I think you had him on your show.
He was talking about how inflation helps Brookfield, because they can raise the rent
and their asset values go up.
So it's an enormous wealth transfer from the working class to the super rich.
I'd like to say it's kind of like a taking from the have-nots to give to the have-yauts.
So what I'm talking about is actually creating opportunity, upward mobility by, you know, having sound money that protects its value, having low taxes for working class people, speeding up permits for housing.
The obstructionism that blocks home building, again, very good if you live in a mansion because your mansion is now worth more money due to the scarcity of homes.
very bad if you're a working class kid trying to buy a house or you're a new immigrant.
So a lot of the poverty we're seeing today is not because of the lack of government assistance.
It's because government is actively tilting the scale against the least fortunate.
And that's what I'm trying to achieve.
When I say bottom up, I mean, let's help the working class, the people in poverty, the newcomers
achieve the life of their dreams by enabling their opportunities.
One of the things that seems different between when I was a kid and now I think is that
I used to feel like there was more a quality of opportunity, not necessarily a quality
of outcome, but a quality of opportunity.
Like I could do anything and I could be anyone.
And I feel like a lot of people have lost that.
Yes, I agree with you on that.
and we need to to bring that that that's what i call the canadian promise that just this idea that
okay it doesn't matter where you start you can achieve anything you want you can go from zero to hero
in canada and we have these you know i travel across the country and the stories i hear of
you know some some guy who's retiring at 65 and he he showed up poor as a church mouse and built it all
from scratch um that's the canadian dream um i i've got a friend who uh who lived uh
just a little ways from here and little Italy.
His family came here with nothing,
and they paid off a house in downtown Ottawa
in seven years on the wage of a road construction worker
and his mom making sandwiches at a senior's home.
We're growing vegetables in the backyard,
and their grandkids wouldn't even be able to make a down payment
in seven years now,
even though they're more educated and have good English language skills.
So I want to bring that back.
I want to bring hope and opportunity back
that anybody who puts in a good day's work and strives hard and follows the law and is honest and
decent can have a beautiful life. That's what Canada should be all about. How do you plan to balance
the budgets while ensuring essential services and what impact do you think this will have
going from an unbalanced budget where we're borrowing essentially from our kids in the future
to a balanced budget on the economy? So there's two questions there. How to balance.
and then what's the impact of a balanced budget.
We have to stop the growth in government spending.
I would bring in a hard dollar for dollar law
that says any new dollar of spending needs to be met with an equal dollar of savings.
They brought this in in the 1990s and the U.S. under Bill Clinton
and they balanced the budget.
They paid off $400 billion of debt.
And they had a booming economy at the same time.
So that law then lapsed in 2001 in America,
went right back into deposit.
The problem is, the great Thomas Sowell said the number one rule of economics is scarcity.
People always want more than there is to have.
And the number one rule of politics is to ignore the number one rule of economics.
And so I think that we've got politicians who, by the nature of the job, don't have to
experience scarcity.
They just externalize it through money printing, taxing, and borrowing.
If you had a law that.
internalized the scarcity, required the government control itself, rather than just going to the
taxpayer or to the lending markets, that would enforce a value for money discipline within the
machinery of government. And so I would reduce the size of the bureaucracy through attrition.
We have 17,000 public servants retiring every year. We don't need to fill every single one of those
spaces. We need to cut back on these consultants, $20 billion for consultants. Really? Like when we have a
50% increase in the size of the public service? Do we need consultants to do their work for them?
I am going to cut back on four and eight. I don't think that we should be sending $7 or $8 billion
out of our country at a time when we can't house our people or provide drinking water and
First Nations reserves. And we're not going to give money to multinational companies that
ultimately take it out of the country in the form of these corporate grants. So those are some
specific areas that we're going to rein in. And what's the effect of a balanced budget? Well,
first of all, it means less inflation. Inflation is the silent thief that creeps up whenever
government is spending more than it brings in. And that's because there's just more money chasing
fewer goods. We have to stop that because it's slowly but surely eroding the buying power of our
working class people. The only way to stop inflation is to stop the deficit spending that
sparks it. I have a theory, and maybe correct me if I'm wrong on this, that Canada can't be on
par with the U.S. to invest. We have to be better than the U.S. to invest in. So when we talk about
multinationals, we want Canada to be the premier country in the world. And with all the uncertainty
in the U.S., maybe it's an opportunity for us to actually become that. What are the steps that we
can take to become the investment of choice for companies when they're setting up a factory?
Right. Yeah, that's a good question. It's funny you raised that because Wilfred Laurier a century ago had the philosophy that we always had to be lower taxed than the Americans to compete with them because they had so much economy of scale. That would be ambitious to get lower than them. But the principle is sound like we capital goes where capital grows. If you can get a better ROI south of the border, you put your, you might put your money there.
Now, that's what's been happening.
In the last 10 years, there's been a net outflow of $500 billion of investment to the U.S.
from Canada.
And that's partly because our taxes are extremely high.
This is a great place for businesses to take money, not a great place to make money.
So you can get a lot of grants to do R&D.
But as soon as you become profitable, where do you want to ever declare that profit?
Well, a lot of companies choose to do it outside of Canada.
Secondly, it's very slow to get anything done in Canada.
We have the second slowest building permits in the OECD,
and it takes 17 years to get a mine approved,
three times longer to get approval for a housing develop in Canada
versus the UK or the U.S.
I was speaking to a really successful British Columbia businessman,
and he started a application for a plaza in B.C.
Took him seven years.
He flew down to Dallas.
and the mayor met him at the airport and said,
what do we have to do to get this done?
And they sat down and hammered it out.
He had his permits in seven weeks.
So where do you think the next plaza is going to go?
It's not going to be in in BC.
So to answer your question, what's the solution?
We should set a goal to bring together all three levels of government
and get the fastest building permits in the world,
in the developer world, really?
You know, sure, we can protect the environment in public safety.
But we don't have to take seven, eight, nine years to do that.
You can do it in, let's try getting it down to six or seven months for major projects.
I'm going to incentivize the municipalities to speed up permits for housing developments.
And, of course, we're going to get rid of the, you know, development law C-69 and C-48
so that we can rapidly approve massive natural resource projects, nuclear plants,
data centers, the associated power stations to feed them electricity.
Let's be the fastest place.
that gets done. The other thing I wanted to was create these shovel ready zones so that we can
do all the environmental research on the front end, publish the specs and the standards that are
required, and the business can just look online and say, okay, well, these are the 10 things we need to do
to comply. Oh, and look at that. What's that? That's a permit. It's pre-published. It's a legally
binding permit. I don't have to apply for it. It's already there. There's no risk. There's no risk.
And then the investor doesn't have to think, geez, I'm going to spend seven years on lawyers and
consultants and lobbyists, and we're going to have to lock down all the capital and collect all
the investors to get to a potential no at the end of the, if the yes is up front with clear
conditions, then problem solved. And then, of course, we are going to cut taxes on investment,
energy, work, and home building so that there's a great ROI to bring the money home here
to Canada. You mentioned regulations. Is there, I mean, it sounds like regulations just only
increase. Like there's a natural entropy to regulations where it's just,
They keep growing, and we never get rid of them, is your government considering a policy that
would be, you know, for every new regulation, we get rid of five or 10 or?
Well, that's good.
I went with two.
We know it's two for one.
That's after initial cut of 25%.
So our commitment is cut 25 percent and then bring in a two for one rule overseen
by the auditor general, not by the government.
And the reason that's important because the current, there is a one for one rule right now.
So what the government is doing is they've kept.
the number of the number of titles down but they've merged more regulation under each title
and so you don't have an independent audit of how much actual regulation there is not just in
rule count but in compliance cost then you'll never actually reduce the size it's every creature
in nature seeks to survive and multiply you know and that's the first law of like any organism
and bureaucracies are no different.
They set up and then they expand and they enlarge.
I've never in all my years on the Finance Committee
had an agency come before us for the budget consultations
and say, you know what?
You hired us to solve a problem five years ago.
And we're happy to report the problem is solved
so you can shut down our agency and we can move on.
That's never happened.
They come back and say, you know, the problem we set out to solve?
It's bigger than ever before.
So you need to double our budget and reward us for the failure
that we caused.
So you actually need hard binding restrictions on their growth.
When we were lasting government, we had the economic crisis and we needed to get projects
done quickly.
So our minister of infrastructure said to the bureaucrats, we need the application forms for
projects to be one page long.
And they wrestled and they fought.
They said it can't be done.
They got it down to one page.
And then he said, we want one environmental review.
And they said, no, this will be a disaster.
There will be species that will go out of existence.
and water will be destroyed and, well, they got it down to one review.
So what happened?
23,500 projects got done from concept to completion in two years, and the Environment
Commissioner, an independent officer, went out and did a full study and review and couldn't
find a single environmental problem that had resulted from it.
So that means that all the other pages of bureaucracy, all the other environmental reviews,
they weren't actually providing any incremental protection for Mother Nature.
They were just giving work for consultants and bureaucrats to do.
Well, that's not what we need.
We need to get projects done.
So let's cut the bureaucracy and the waste.
And as Bob Stanfield said, stop stopping and start starting.
Why do we default to know?
It's safer.
It's safe just to say no to everything, right?
and nothing can go wrong on the surface.
I mean, obviously there's enormous negative consequences to saying no,
but you can't see them.
It's all the wonderful things that would have happened but didn't.
So it's just easier for a bureaucrat to say,
no, you're not going any further.
And it takes boldness and audacity to push through that.
Canada's economy creates less value per worker than America's.
And the difference in the last 10 years has grown quite a bit to a meaningful degree.
Most people don't understand this on their day-to-day lives.
So what is this productivity gap and why should ordinary Canadians care about?
Well, productivity is a very simple concept.
You know, eyes glaze over when they hear it, but it really is measured in a very simple way.
It's the GDP of the country divided by the total hours worked in that country.
And so today, we generate $53 USD for every hour we work as Canadians.
the Americans generate $78.
So you can see that they're making almost 50% more economic value in an hour worked.
Why is that?
I mean, if you put two workers side by side, an American and a Canadian, I would argue we have better workers.
So why is the American generating more value?
The answer is that he has more tools and technology.
And we know that because of another calculation.
take business investment in Canada divide it by the number of workers in Canada we get
$15,000 of investment per worker per year and the states is $28,000 we're way behind even the
OECD average we get 65 cents of investment per worker for every dollar an OECD average worker
gets so we're we're capital starved our workers are not getting the same CNC machines the
same large heavy equipment, the same factories and mills and other things that actually
generate output. And why is that? Well, again, we go back to the same two problems. Very high
taxes, very slow permits. This is not a place where you can get things done. And even if you do,
you're punished for it. So by removing those penalties and making this a rewarding place to invest
with a green light that gets you off to the races quickly and then a low,
tax environment where you benefit from what you do, I think the money is going to pour in.
You know, I think of, and you can turn it around really quick.
My grandfather came from Ireland.
I don't know the exact date now.
Unfortunately, he's no longer with us, but it would have been about 60, 65, 60 years ago, I think,
because Ireland was poor.
That was what it was known for at the time.
Now Ireland's per capita GDP is twice Canada's.
And why?
Because they opened up to free enterprise.
very low taxes, very fast permits, lots of free trade, and they don't have any of our resources.
They're not next door to the biggest economy in the world. So they shouldn't be anywhere as rich as
Canada, but they're twice our GDP. But it shows that if you unlock free enterprise, then you can
achieve incredible boosts in your living standards in a very short period of time. And that's what
I think we can do in Canada. We should be the wealthiest country in the world. Absolutely.
you got the most third most oil the fifth most gas the first in uranium first in potash
the biggest oceanic cloak coastline in the world the most fresh water the fifth most farmland
per capita the fifth most lithium the abundant rivers for hydroelectricity like we have so
many resources it should be a corticopia of wealth and that's what we will be i want to talk about
what's on everybody's mind tariffs how should we respond to the u.S.
tit for tat, the right approach in a situation where one trading partner is significantly
larger than the other. I do think you need to retaliate because if not, there's no deterrent
value. The offending country, in this case, it's the U.S. administration, needs to know that there's a
cost for its producers in tariffing Canada. So I do believe in retaliating. On day one, what I would
propose to the president is, let's put the tariffs on ice, let's sit down and renegotiate the
Kuzma in a very quick turnaround.
And in the meantime, let's be tariff-free, no chaos, no market ups and downs,
end the daily stock market drama, no tariffs for, let's say, 100 or 120 days,
let's try to get a deal.
In that deal, I would seek a permanent end to the tariffs, protection for our sovereignty.
The things that I would put on the table as offers, I would make sure they're all things
we can pull back immediately if the president again breaks his part of the bargain and starts
tariffing us again. There are some things that I think most Canadians would be comfortable
offering. For example, if you poll, most Canadians want to rebuild our military anyway.
So this is not something we need Donald Trump to tell us to do. We can do that. And what we can
offer the Americans is that the more they trade with us, the more powerful our economy will be
and the more national defense we can find. And I will put that defense money into the
the defense of our shared continent, which is, I think, what they really want. They're saying,
you know, enough, uh, enough of this situation where we protect your Arctic waters and your
Arctic skies, uh, if you want to, to be, we want to be a partner. We don't want to carry you.
Yeah, we exactly. So do your part. And Canadians agree with that. And I think we can offer that.
We can, our two countries can build the hardware of defense together in ways that are good for both
of our economies. And I think if we put that on the table and we do it in a way, though, that we
can pull back any commitments we've made to them at the instant the deal is violated, then we will
be in a strong position not only to nail down a deal, but to crystallize it so we don't end up
with this chaos again. How do we become less dependent on the U.S. at the same time as being
their partner? We don't want to end up in a situation where somebody can turn off our economy
on a tap on the most. And that's where we are right now. We have to be.
build pipelines for sure. Our single biggest export is oil and gas, if you add gas, it's by far
orders of magnitude our biggest net export. But unfortunately, 100% of our gas goes to the Americans,
about 95% of our oil goes to them. And that is a function of not having any way to get it off
are to tide water. We have now one pipeline that has just started chugging westward.
still some of that oil though actually goes to California but we need pipe pipeline west maybe pipe one north
maybe one through the port of churchill and hudson's bay and i would ideally like to have an east
west pipeline so i i intend to get the shovel ready zones to create a national energy corridor
with pre-approval for pipelines second thing is lNG we have we're the fifth biggest supplier but we're
selling it for four bucks to the Americans, when we could be selling it for 14 to the Europeans
and a similarly high price to the Asians. Now, if you get gas overseas, you have to liquefy it
and put it on a ship. So you need these big liquefaction plants that compress and cool the gas
into a liquid. We have an enormous advantage there too because our cold weather makes it 25%
cheaper to liquefay. Liqueification is obviously a function of cooling things down. So then the second thing
it's 11 days to ship to Asia from BC. It's 20 days from the U.S. Gulf Coast. So again,
another massive advantage over the Americans. The final advantage is we have this abundance of
hydroelectricity. The Americans don't have enough electricity to serve their existing demand,
let alone to power more industrial activity. We do. We're net exports of electricity,
and we can produce even more. The biggest infrastructure project in Canadian history is LNG,
Canada, in northwest BC, approved by Harper.
facilitated by First Nations chief Alice Ross, who's my candidate in that area, $40 billion.
This is by far the biggest project.
Put this in perspective.
There were 18 of these projects on the table back in 2015.
18.
Like, these are, this is an enormous amount of investment we could be bringing.
But the Squamish people, they took 14 years to get an approval for their project.
It's an indigenous-led project, and the government,
made them jerk around for 14 years. We should be approving these things in months. And then the
coastal First Nations in BC would become literally the richest people in the world, exporting our gas
overseas to Asia. And then in the East Coast, we can do it out of Sagney, out of Newfoundland,
potentially out of the maritime provinces, and go around the Americans and say to them, you know,
you don't want our gas, fine. We'll sell it to the Europeans and the Asians. We'll make a heck of a lot more
money doing it. How does the lack of free trade between provinces impact people?
Higher price is lower wages. Things cost more because there are a bunch of hoops to jump through
and then lower wages because we can't generate as much wealth. You look at the trucking sector,
for example, we don't have harmonized trucking regulations across the country. So you're going
over the border between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. There's a weight regulation.
difference. So, you know, you can't move products seamlessly between those two provinces. How
can you have free trade in this country? Obviously, the lack of pipelines is a form of a trade
barrier. And we need to knock down these barriers. I'm committed to sit down with the provinces
and say, look, I'll make you a deal. We can calculate how much GDP boost we get every time you
knock down a trade barrier. And that means more federal revenues. I will give you those revenues.
So if, say, Saskatchewan arbitrarily gets rid of all of its protections and lets free trade into its province from other Canadians, well, my officials will sit down and say, well, this is the GDP boost and the federal revenue haul from that, let's give that to the Saskatchewan government.
And that will create a powerful incentive for provincial governments to knock down those barriers.
I like that.
Do you like that one?
It's a carrot.
That's a good one.
Thank you.
I want to go back to the Trump and tariffs just for a second.
It seems from the outside looking in a lot of what he's trying to do is slow the rise of China.
Yeah.
Or to level the playing field between the U.S. and China.
And out of the things that you mentioned that you would do, you never use the word China.
Look, I think we do need to stand up against Chinese interference.
in our country, whether it's foreign political interference,
or whether it's unfair trade practices that de-industrialize Canada
and make us overly dependent on them.
There's a lot of risks to that.
We also need to keep China out of our Arctic waters, skies and soil,
by having a stronger national defense.
I think if we have to choose between Beijing and the U.S.,
obviously the U.S. is our closest neighbor.
they're the biggest economic and military superpower in the history of the world.
And up until recently, they were very friendly to us.
The president's wrongheaded tariffs, notwithstanding,
we still need a strong relationship with the United States.
And one of the things I would say to the Americans is,
if you want to strengthen yourself vis-a-vis China,
you don't do it by picking fights with Canada, for God's sakes.
Like, what is Canada?
How does ostracizing an alien in Canada achieve that?
You should give us more access to your market, and we should trade and grow our economies in
synchronicity rather than fighting with each other because Trump tariffs against Canada
actually only strengthen China because they weaken both Canada and the U.S.
So the argument I will make is how do we strengthen ourselves as North Americans against the Chinese threat?
We need to knock down the crazy tariffs.
The Americans need to respect our sovereignty, and we need to separately, but cooperatively, strengthen our militaries.
I want to talk about media for a second.
I know this is a thing for you.
It's a thing many people don't understand.
So I want to get into it a little bit here.
Many Canadian media outlets are partially government funded, not only via the Canadian periodical fund, but they get subsidies for journalist salaries.
the government is a large advertiser, not to mention regulatory barriers that are put in place
to prevent competition, which when I think about this, it sort of raises concerns for me about
bias and editorial freedom. How would you ensure that journalists can hold all politicians,
including you, accountable while preserving a diverse and independent press?
Well, first and foremost, free speech. I would repeal C-11. That's the
the censorship law, which gives extraordinary powers to the CRTC to control what content is
seen, to boost certain types of content that they deem to be Canadian in nature, although
there's no real definition of that, and then discourage other content, and I think that will
over time be a surreptitious way of trying to manage the debate in favor of what the government
wants people to see. I would repeal that entirely. We need to look at the internet and the
rise of social media differently than this government. They think it's, they think that having
too many voices is a threat. I think it's an opportunity. I mean, you wouldn't be able to do this.
You wouldn't have been able to do this 30 years ago unless you wanted to, you know, wanted to
invest tens of millions of dollars in a production studio and a distribution plan and you'd have to
signed deals with a broadcaster to get yourself on air.
But the fact that you have this voice is the result of social media and the internet.
The existing media is not threatened by rising costs or a diminishing number of people
interested in reading news.
There are challenges.
There's massive increase in competition.
There's actually more media today than there ever has been.
It's just that it's not the traditional media.
that we think of.
And I don't think that's a bad thing.
I think we should open the door and let the lights in.
You know, the government's approach reminds me of Bastia, the French philosopher.
He said there are some that believe that we should ban windows so that we can sell more candles.
Then people will have to buy more candles to illuminate their homes instead of letting the sunlight in.
And I don't believe that.
I think we should open up the drapes and let the light come in and let everyone have a voice.
and the ultimate regulator of what you read and see
is the reader, viewer, or listener.
And hopefully they tune in big numbers for this podcast.
Well, we'll make this available to any Canadian media outlet.
Oh, good.
A copy of it.
Excellent.
So they can put it on their side.
I like the sounds of that.
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Do you think your position on media allows you to be covered accurately?
When one candidate is saying we shouldn't be offering as many subsidies to media and one candidate is offering more
subsidies to media how do we like I don't understand this I think it's a problem I think it's a problem
you know I I think it makes it very difficult for media to make a judgment without keeping the
back of their head with which politician is going to pay the biggest subsidy and I think that's that's
worrisome the the media should be objectively reporting on the stories but if you know a politician
is coming along and saying, well, I'm going to give more money to this or that outlet than
my opponent will, then obviously that could create the perception of bias in the resulting
reporting. And that's, I don't think government should control the media. I think the idea of
free press is that it's independent from the government. I want to come back to free speech for a
second. How do we protect free speech in the digital age while addressing the spread of harmful
content online? And what role, if any, should the government play? Well, how do you,
you define harmful content. I think on the extremes, it's pretty easy, right? When you have people
marching down the middle of the street saying death to a certain group of people, that's harmful
content, right? That's hate speech. Conspiracy theories, on the other hand, I would say, is not
harmful content. But where I think, you know, one of my perceptions here is this might be the last
election where legacy media is directing attention. The next one might be LLMs. And if we start
regulating free speech, we're going to start regulating what
LLMs can and can't say. And that's how we'll control.
Sorry, LLMs. Where are LLMs? Like large language models.
Large language.
Oh, yeah. Okay.
People will be getting their information from a different source than they're
getting it from today, perhaps. I don't know.
Hypothesizing here.
Jeez, that's something else. I hadn't thought of that.
So, you know, what if they just replace politicians with the large language models,
then that? Well, I think some of them, that might be a good thing.
I hope you're excluding.
Hey goodness, you had to be worried there for a second.
Well, there's already a lot of artificial intelligence in government.
It's just a different kind.
The less high-tech kind.
What was the question then?
Sorry, I've distracted myself.
What role or any should the government play in the process of regulating speech?
The criminal code already bans incitements to violence and incitement to genocide.
other utterances that are that are designed to instruct a violent or hostile attack against a
particular group of people.
That is in the criminal code already and that has not harmed free speech.
What I worry about, you know, you're talking about people marching down streets and shouting
death to this or that group, you know, a lot of that is not the result of free speech,
but it's about a very toxic ideology that has been pushed from the top down.
You look at the way the Jewish community has been targeted.
Well, governments have pushed ideologies through universities and schools
and even government departments that have given grants to extreme racist, anti-Semites.
And so the ideology is not coming from, you know, Joe and Jane public going online
and just blurting out obscenities about a particular group.
It's coming from a really toxic radical ideology that has proliferated in halls of power over the last roughly decade.
We had one guy, Lath Maruth, who said things about Jews that I can't even repeat.
The guy got a grant for an anti-racism program.
The University of Ottawa had hired a guy as a professor who committed a terrorist attack in Paris before he came to Canada.
Some of the schools are pushing kids to go into these awful anti-Israel anti-Jewish protest.
I see that as a top-down phenomenon, not a bottom-up one.
So I don't think that we should use that as an excuse to take away legitimate political discourse in the intranet.
Talk to me about crime.
I mean, we sort of alluded to it a little bit there, but I mean, it's gotten to the point where, you know,
parents are afraid. It's a very different country. And then I grew up in, when I was, you know, 14, I was out roaming the streets in the middle of the night. And there wasn't a worry. Right. You know, I'd sneak out of my bedroom and, like, go to the local grocery store and get one of those McCain frozen cakes and I would eat that. Well, that's really badass. A McCain frozen cake. Back in the day.
Well, now your parents are going to, you know about that. But now they will, yeah. But my parents are afraid to go outside. Crime is, is dramatically increasing.
Police officer, we watched, with my kids, we watched a guy piss on a police car at a red light a few months ago, and the guy didn't even get out of his car to arrest him.
Yeah. What's going on with crime in Canada?
Well, the cops tell me that, you know, they call that. They call it Fido. I'll say it the polite way. Forget it, drive on. They say it, an impolite way. They see a crime and they forget it and drive on because it's not worth their time to arrest people anymore.
um the the liberal catch and release laws make it so that it's extremely easy to be released from prison
so i'll give you an example bill c75 is the liberal bail law and it requires judges release
the accused under quote the earliest opportunity under the least onerous conditions that's required by
law now bail is one thing if you're a first time accused you know never been accused of anything in your life
you might not be guilty of anything. That's what bail is for. But what they're doing now is releasing
people who have like 60, 70 prior convictions. And if you wonder about the veracity of that,
in Vancouver, the police had to arrest the same 40 offenders 6,000 times, 40 guys. Each one of
these guys was arrested on average once every two days, 150 times a year for one guy. And the police,
they bring them in, the judge gives them bail, the police are still filling out the paperwork,
the guy's already out in the street, the police then have to catch him again and bring him back
in, and you can be, you can have like 16 or 17 live charges waiting trial and accumulating
them. And the good news is, we don't have a lot of criminals in Canada. The bad news is
they're extremely productive or destructive. You take those 40 guys off the street in Vancouver,
you eliminate 6,000 crimes. The guy,
That's a lot of lives saved.
That's a lot of people's businesses that are not going to be burnt or smashed or robbed
if you take 40 guys off the street.
Then you've got house arrest under C5.
It allows serious offenders of really grave crimes to do their sentence in their living room.
So they can just walk out the front door and reoffend.
They've gotten rid of mandatory jail time for bank robberies and extortions and serious possession
of lots of drugs. That's the cause of this crime wave. And I'm going to reverse all of it. I will
be repealing the catch and release law, C-75. I'll repeal house arrest for serious offenses.
I'm going to be bringing in a three strikes or outlaw. If you get convicted of three serious
violent offenses, you will be permanently ineligible for bail, parole, probation, or house
arrest. It will be jail, not bail. Such offenders will get a minimum of 10 years, and they will only be
released after that 10 years if they earn their release through impeccable behavior,
clean drug tests, and by learning an employable skill.
So no longer will we have parole where by law, you're automatically given back a release.
You'll have to earn the release.
And that will make jails into a real repair shop.
Let's fix these people up and get them back into a productive law-abiding mindset before
we put them on the street.
We're going to secure the borders with more scanners of shipping containers, 2,000 more
CBSA officers and we're going to treat addiction. Addiction is out of control. We're going to treat
50,000 people who are suffering from addiction, break that cycle. And I think we can really bring
back a peaceful, good life on our streets in Canada. How much do you think crime, like the lead
domino to sort of crime and maybe addiction is the lack of opportunity or the feeling,
the perception of the lack of fairness, lack of opportunity?
I think that's probably one of the causes for the drug crisis.
And then the drug crisis does lead into a lot of other crimes.
So if you can think, you think of yourself as being 34 years old.
And you feel like you have no future at all.
You can't afford a house.
You're not going to be able to start a family.
You run off your legs.
You feel life has become pointless and directionless.
You can see how you might end up trying out a powerful narcotic.
and then getting addicted.
And so I think we need to give our younger generation
a feeling of hope again,
that their energies will not only create great things for the country,
but give them a chance at a better life.
I do think that's part of the equation.
It's interesting.
You sort of said, like, you try it.
You don't, when I was driving by one of the injection sites
the other day with my kids,
the only thing I can ever think of to tell them
is like nobody thought they would be addicted when they started it.
Right.
Absolutely.
And this stuff is very dangerous.
Like two milligrams of fentanyl can kill you.
So you might be at a party one night and you're having a few drinks and people say,
and try this and your inhibitions are down and you take it and your lungs stop.
So we really have to stop the fentanyl.
And treatment's the way to do it for addiction.
We know treatment works.
It's hard.
It's painful.
but the miracles that I hear really inspiring.
And if we can repeat those across the country,
like I went to a treatment center in Moncton,
and I said to the guys there,
you know, often I'm sure politicians come and say,
I'm going to offer this or that help to you,
but I'm actually here to ask you for help.
I need you to get better
so that you can then go out onto the street
and find the next guy and you can pull him up by his hand
and you can bring him in here and make him get better
and he can go out and pull the next guy up.
And through that virtuous cycle,
we can defeat this scourge and bring peace back to our streets.
I hope you're right.
Healthcare in Canada is primarily a provincial responsibility,
but the federal government provides crucial funding and guidance.
How would you work with the provinces to ensure consistent, high-quality health care across the country?
So we're going to preserve the funding.
There's a funding increase that's baked into the Canada health transfer right now.
We're going to preserve that.
But we think there's some really low-cost things we can do to massively expand the availability of physicians and nurses.
So we have, for example, 20,000 immigrant doctors, 32,000 immigrant nurses who can't work because they don't have a license in Canada.
It's not because they're not qualified.
It's just there's no way to prove their qualifications that doesn't involve years of bureaucracy.
And so when I got my eye surgery here in Ottawa, the technician, he's actually a doctor in the UAE.
He lives here with his family in Ottawa.
He flies to the UAE, does 10 days of surgeries, and comes back here, we only let him work as a technician.
So are you really telling me that Emerity eyeballs are different than Canadian eyeballs?
Then I went back for my checkup a year later, and I brought up the story.
and he says there's five people like me in this one clinic.
Immigrant eye surgeons who are forced to work as technicians.
In Toronto, they say if you have a heart attack, don't call 911,
call an Uber because the driver is probably a doctor.
So we have all these doctors.
So how do we get them licensed?
Because we had just let anybody become a doctor.
We can't just say, well, you were a doctor in some other place.
The answer is to have a national licensing test like we already have four.
the trades. For 72 years, we've had a licensing standard in the trades that's recognized in every
province and administered by the federal government. It still respects provincial jurisdiction because it's
voluntary and it still hits our high standards because there's a real test. We could get these people
tested, licensed, and serving communities right across the country. It would also help with Canadian
kids who study in Ireland or the Caribbean or the states come back and quickly get licensed. That's a
like an extremely low-cost way to free up doctors and nurses into our system.
Many voters worry that private care or expanded choice could undermine the principles of universal
health care. How do you see innovation or reform fitting into the system? And what safeguards
would you put in place to ensure equal access for Canadians regardless of income?
So we'll protect the Canada Health Act and we'll make sure that no one is ever,
denied care because of an inability to pay. I think that's a basic Canadian value. And the provinces
really do administer the care itself and how it actually comes through. But the federal
spending powers there to basically make sure that nobody's left behind that you don't have a
system where someone can't get an essential treatment because they don't have a, they can't afford
health insurance. And I think we need to preserve, we need to preserve that universal
health care that we've all relied on. What we need to do, though, is sort of knock down
some of these barriers that have made it too bureaucratic and have blocked, you know,
like I said, non-Canadian trained physicians from working. And we also need to speed up,
by the way, drug approval. So we have lots of advanced medication.
and treatments that are available in the states and EU that are not available yet here because
our bureaucracy is so slow, we should speed that up as well by recognizing treatments that
are working in other comparable and advanced jurisdictions. I think that would be a way to get
faster improvements in the system. That doesn't just apply to health care. I mean, that applies
to anything, right? Where there's somebody else who we trust and rely on has done, you know,
100% of the work. Maybe we can rely on that for 80% of the work and reduce our cost.
Exactly. I think we need to see more of that.
Geopolitics is rapidly changing our spending on defense, but the future of the military looks vastly different than it does today.
What does a modern and effective Canadian military look like?
Well, we are going to have to invest in AI, in advanced robotics, advanced aviation, drone technology.
I think we need to bulk up the cybercompact.
of our military. You know, the future attacks might not be, you know, a bunch of troops
landing on the shores or a battalion arriving to invade or even an aircraft with a pilot
coming in. It could be, you know, a malware that shuts down a power station and deprives a city
of electricity or scrambles up our banking records. So your mortgage is not what you thought it
was going to be, or scrambles up the data and the government so that people don't get their
benefits. Those sorts of kind of cyber attacks might be the norm in the future, and we need to
be ready to defend against them. We should have the most advanced cyber and high tech warfare
and defense capabilities anywhere in the world to protect ourselves and our allies. And I also think
there's a great opportunity for our economy. Look at the Israelis. They have conscription. We're
ever going to have conscription. But their young people go into the forces and they learn all about
technology and they then leave and they start businesses and they call it the startup nation because
they have such incredibly brilliant young people that come out of the military with all these
extra skills. Well, we should be thinking the same way. Our young, our cadets, we're not obviously
in the military, but they are obviously being mentored by military. And our reservists who are still going
to university. Why don't we find a way to give them the best cyber security skills possible?
And then when they leave the forces, they have an honorable discharge, they go off and they
work for a bank defending the IT network or some similar job. We could use that as a real
technological springboard for our economy at the same time. As a former employee of one of our
intelligence agencies, I would agree with that. Okay, you probably can't say any more than that.
We have great people who work in these agencies, and we are the world leader in some of these capabilities.
But Canadians have been brought up not to talk about our success, too, which is...
Why do you think that is?
I don't know.
Like, you tell me, you would know more.
Like, we don't like the tall poppy, you know?
We don't like the people who stand out or who go for bold ambitions, who go for gold.
Right.
And I don't know why.
Like, we're content to go for bronze when we could be going for gold and we should be going for gold.
How do we change that? How do we change that mentality in your view?
I think we need to celebrate our successes, for one.
I mean, my kids, you remember we used to have those Canadian heritage commercials on TV?
Yes.
Like when I talk to my kids, they don't learn about famous Canadians.
They don't learn about Timothy Eaton.
They don't learn about people who start a businesses who were successful, who drive the economy.
They sort of learned some quasi-version of socialism in school.
and they don't learn about Richard Feynman
when they're taught math.
And I'm like, why don't?
Like, that pulls people in, these characters.
We've got to change that.
I think we have to tell our stories
and we have to be more proud of our history
because it brings us together.
And that's shared sense of accomplishment
is what binds the country together.
And that's going to be part of my goal
is to, you know,
we're going to put all our heroes back in the passport,
for example.
No more tearing down statues.
I think we should build new statues.
I was meeting some First Nations people.
And I said, we should build statues in honor of your greatest heroes.
Let's expand the celebration of history rather than tearing it down.
I think that's how we unite the country.
I totally agree that, you know, we definitely need to look back.
And, you know, it's not always pleasant.
what we've done in a past, but also shaming people for something that happened so long ago
is not super effective at changing the future. Absolutely. I think we can do this. And as you say,
I think we need to tell our young people that entrepreneurs are heroes. That's the guy who
mortgages his house and doesn't have a good night's sleep for four years because he's trying to
build something from scratch that has a 10% chance of success. And then it breaks through,
that guy should be given a pat on the back and not treat it as some kind of a, you know, a bandit
because of the success.
As AI and other emerging technologies reshape the job market and the privacy landscape,
how do you balance innovation with sort of protecting workers' livelihoods and Canadians' personal data?
That's a very good question.
First of all, I think we do need to ban and criminalize the unapproved use of other
people's images in intimate acts.
There's really appalling these AI images that take someone's a person and have them
performing different acts.
That is an intimate acts.
I think that's really appalling.
We need to protect people against that.
I think we need to have stronger protections for our kids against online luring.
And at the same time, we need to make sure that the government doesn't abuse these
new powers. And some people say, well, all the powers of AI need to be concentrated in the government
to protect us all. Okay. But we have to make sure the government then doesn't abuse those powers
either. Because if there can be abuse in the private sector, there can be abuse in the government.
So we have to hold the state accountable and make sure that the regulations that the government
puts in are truly designed to protect the public interest, not to protect the interest of just
the people who are in power.
do we do that, though? Like, what does that look like? When you say that, when you, you mean,
like, what kind of regulations? What would you blame bring in? Or what are you asking exactly?
Like, if you have power, how do we prevent people from abusing that power? I mean, you can put,
you can legislate things, but I mean, as a question is, all this man. For the past 10 years,
I mean, we've seen scandal after scandal and, and sort of no consequences to those. So how, how does
that work? I mean, you're talking more just generally about accountability or particularly on the
AI front? Well, both. Like, how do we hold the government accountable? Specifically with,
let's tackle specifically with AI. Like, yeah, how do we ensure that the government can be held
accountable in a world where they might control information flow? I think transparency. People need to
know what rules are government imposing on the AI companies and what instructions are. And what instructions
are they giving the companies? All of that should be publicly known. We don't want
for backroom manipulations to be allowed. It should be the truth should be public. And
that way the people can say, well, listen, you know, in this case, I can see that the government
is genuinely protecting public interests. They're protecting my daughter against an online
threat. But in that case, a different case, the government is using its regulation to advance
a political agenda. And we then the voter can punish that at the ballot box. So I think the answer is
that transparency, the sunlight is the best disinfected. I have no data on this other than anecdotal
and friends, but trust in government seems to be at a near all-time low. Okay. Post-COVID.
Is that, why do you think that is? Like, what would explain that? If you just entertain the
hypotheses that that might be true.
Well, you know, I think part of it is the government keeps telling us of all the wonderful
things they're going to do for us. And then it results in misery for the people who
they claim they're helping. Like, you know, so they bring in the monstrous housing program
10 years ago and say, well, the government's going to get back into housing and that's going to
make it affordable. Well, and the housing costs double. An entire generation can't afford a home.
Or the government says, we're going to massively increase spending.
because we're trying to help well what happens well only a small number of largely affluent people
actually get the help and everyone else gets the bill and you got two million people lined up at a food
bank so people say you know every time they tell me they're going to do something wonderful for me
it turns out i get i get stuck with a terrible bill and my life gets turned upside down and i think
naturally people are very frustrated with that and i've tried to channel that frustration
towards a positive outcome which is let's change it let's stop let's stop making these
ridiculous promises that government is going to do everything for us because the government can't
give you anything without first taking it away the government doesn't have any of its own money
so every time they promise these things they're really talking about taking from you what we need to do
is have a government that is back to the basics does a few things right rather than a lot of
things poorly and then lets people prosper and grow and build their lives in the whole country.
I want to hit on climate change because we haven't talked about that at all yet.
Many Canadians believe in government action on climate change. And I want to ask a nuanced question
on this. So in a world where one country opts into taking action on climate change and
others can easily opt out, that risks making us uncompetitive, particularly given the role of
natural resources and how they play such a vital part in our economy. How will you ensure that
Canada does its part in tackling climate change while also continuing to grow the economy and
ensuring Canada and Canadians remain globally competitive? That's a good question. I think we have to
remember the problem of carbon leakage, which is when you increase taxes and burdens on Canadian
industry to a point where production
offshores in more polluting
jurisdictions, and then you end up
with even more global
pollution while you have even
less Canadian output
and industry.
And that's what I think we've seen over the last
decade. The government
has increased taxes on investment,
on energy, on payroll.
So businesses say, well,
you know, it's cheaper to go produce
in some other place where they have no
regulations. I'll give
that the most obvious example to me is the Suntec tomatoes in Manatech.
They're paying a carbon tax on the CO2 they release into the greenhouse,
even though it's absorbed by the plant life.
That's, you know, that's, you know, that's grade school of science.
So the Mexican tomato is more affordable in Manitik than the Manitish tomato.
So the government sends a price signal to the consumer to buy a tomato that had to be transported,
burning fossil fuels from Mexico by truck and train all the way to Canada rather than incentivizing
the local purchase. And that's an example of when you punish your own production, you don't
necessarily get lower emissions. You just get less opportunity here. So I want to bring in a tax
break for companies that produce goods below emission levels, like a tax break for investment
over at the aluminum, the Rio Tinto plant in Saginae. They produce.
reduce one ton of aluminum with two tons of carbon.
China, it's 14 tons of carbon for every ton of aluminum.
So by repatriating production of aluminum to Canada from China,
you're not only enriching our economy, you're actually reducing global emissions.
We want to cut taxes on low-emitting Canadian and industries to bring the production home
and bring emissions down at the same time.
That's my overall approach.
I just have two questions for a wrap-ups.
So one is, what do you think other people's biggest misconception about you is?
I think that, you know, because I, I spend a lot of time with the people in Canada that are suffering the most,
the people who can't afford a home, whose businesses are going under, who can't feed their kids.
And sometimes I find, I find that very upsetting, and it comes off as,
aggressive, but it comes from, I don't think people, maybe perhaps they might not know that
it comes from a place of caring for the people that I'm fighting for. And my challenge is to convert
that care into showing people the positive vision I have for the country, the brighter future
that we have with change. And that's what I have to convey in these closing weeks. So that people have
hope. I want people to go to the polls, not because they're angry, but because they're hopeful.
Usually the final question I ask for any guest is, what does success look like for you?
But I think, in your case, I want to change that slightly. What does success look like for Canada
four years from now if you're elected?
I think it's a place where every kid grows up knowing that they can achieve anything they want.
Parents sit them down and say, look, what do you want to do? You want to be an astronaut? You want to start a
business. You want to cure cancer. You just want to have to have.
a nice house with a dog and have a couple of kids that play street hockey in the front
driveway, you can do any of that. All you have to do is work hard, and that's what I want
the country to have. I just want everybody to have in this country, and that would be a success.
Is there anything we haven't covered that you want to get on the record?
No, I think that's good. I think that's all.
This was great. Thank you for taking the time today.
Thank you for having me. I really enjoy your show and look forward to seeing you next time.
Appreciate that.