Monday, March 19, 2007

Jim Flaherty: Budget Speech : Complete text

I will post more later but here it is direct from the source, rhetoric and all! Actually the source is money.canoeMon, March 19, 2007

Text of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's budget speech



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OTTAWA (CP) - Text of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's budget speech in the House of Commons:


Introduction

Mr. Speaker, Canada is strong today, and we have a plan for an even better tomorrow.

This budget is about helping families. It is also about achieving our country's full potential, and showing a modern, ambitious and energetic Canada to the world.

Today, we reduce the tax burden on working families - again.

Today, we act to preserve our environment.

Today, we move to modernize our health-care system.

Today, we crack down on corporations that have avoided paying their fair share.

And today, we take historic action to restore fiscal balance in this country.

We build from a foundation of strength.

Our unemployment rate is the lowest in 30 years.

Our fiscal fundamentals are the strongest in the G7.

We are paying down over $22 billion against the national debt. That's $700 for every man, woman and child in Canada.

Our taxes are lower.

Our budget is balanced.

Mr. Speaker, in looking to the future, we take inspiration from our country's magnificent past.

Canada is great because Canadians made it great. The people who built this country worked hard to realize their vision. They set us on a bold course to greater hope and opportunity.

They had a passion for the free, prosperous and welcoming country they called Canada.

We stand on their shoulders. We live in the Canada they forged.

We feel a debt of gratitude to our ancestors who fought for our freedom. Who built this country with their hands and their hearts.

Canada is a powerful idea. We are a modern nation that stands up for Canadian values in this world.

We are prosperous and compassionate.

Aspirational and welcoming.

Independent and strong.

Mr. Speaker, today we take the next steps in building the Canada that we will be proud to pass on to our own children and grandchildren.

A modern Canada ready to take its rightful place in the world. A Canada where people can realize their dreams, and live in prosperity and peace.

To that end, Mr. Speaker, I am honoured to be tabling our Government's second budget today.

Let me share just some of the proposed budget initiatives with you, which will result in a stronger, safer, better Canada.

Making Canada Work Better: Fiscal Balance

Let me speak first about a better Canada.

The first step to making Canada even better tomorrow is to restore the fiscal balance in this country today.

Our prime minister has shown great leadership on this issue.

Not defending turf. Not engaging in parochial politics. But acting in the best interests of Canadians.

There's been a lot of talk about fiscal balance, Mr. Speaker. But what is it really about?

It's about better roads and renewed public transit. Better health care. Better-equipped universities. Cleaner oceans, rivers, lakes and air. Training, to help Canadians get the skills they need. It's about building a better future for our country.

And that means getting adequate funding to provincial and territorial governments.

We get that. The provinces get that. Canadians get that. Almost everybody gets it.

So we're taking action. Through this budget, we are delivering an historic plan worth over $39 billion in additional funding to restore fiscal balance in Canada.

Our plan is based on principles.

Accountability through clarity of roles and responsibilities.

Fiscal responsibility and budget transparency.

Predictable, long-term fiscal arrangements.

A competitive and efficient economic union.

And effective, collaborative management of the federation.

Here's what this plan includes:

We are keeping our commitments on equalization.

We are returning equalization to a principled, formula-based program. We are maintaining the benefits of the Offshore Accords, as requested by the governments of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.

As we promised, every province will be better off under the new plan. Under the new plan, provinces will get the greater of

The amount they would receive by fully excluding natural resource revenues

Or, by including 50 per cent of natural resource revenues.

A fiscal capacity cap will provide fairness by ensuring that equalization payments do not result in a receiving province ending up with a fiscal capacity higher than a non-receiving province.

Equalization-receiving provinces will receive an additional $1.5 billion this year - an increase of $1.9 billion since we took office - to ensure all provinces can continue to invest in roads and infrastructure, post-secondary education and health care.

We are also renewing and strengthening the Territorial Formula Financing program by $115 million this year to ensure the territories can take advantage of the extraordinary opportunities in their futures.

And, Mr. Speaker, there is more to restoring fiscal balance than restoring equalization.

We are also keeping our commitment to restoring equal, per capita cash allocations in other transfer programs for the provinces.

Starting in 2007-08, we will put the Canada Social Transfer payments on an equal per capita cash basis to support post-secondary education, social assistance and social services equally in all provinces. We will increase the CST by $800 million for post-secondary education in 2008-09, and by three per cent per year afterwards. CST funding for post-secondary education will rise to $3.2 billion in 2008-09, a 40 per cent increase - an additional $16 billion more invested in our future through the CST over seven years.

We are also committing to move the Canada Health Transfer to an equal per capita cash basis when the current arrangement expires in 2014.

We will invest $250 million more per year to create child care spaces with the provinces, beginning in 2007-08. This is on top of the $850 million invested annually in early childhood development and child care.

We are providing $500 million a year for labour market training starting in 2008-09 - $3 billion more over six years - to ensure Canadians get the skills training they need for the future.

And we are keeping our commitment to Canada's future by improving Canada's infrastructure.

Starting this year, each province and territory will get base infrastructure funding of $25 million per year, and additional cash on a per capita basis. We are making an unprecedented investment in Canada - $16 billion in new funding, for a total of $33 billion over the next seven years. We will also make additional investments in national, growth-oriented projects like the Asia-Pacific Gateway, to which we are now committing $1 billion in federal funding.

To help municipalities with their infrastructure needs, we are also extending our gas tax funding to 2013-14.

To support important environmental initiatives with the provinces, we have created a new, $1.5-billion Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change.

The actions taken in Budget 2007 will restore fiscal balance through long-term, fair and predictable transfers.

Mr. Speaker, the long, tiring, unproductive era of bickering between the provincial and federal governments is over.

A Better Canada

There are values and beliefs that unite us. Make us proud. That embody what it means to be Canadian.

To achieve a better Canada, we must invest based on those values and beliefs.

First of all, we help the vulnerable - and aspire to help one another.

Secondly, we take pride in the spectacular beauty of our country, and aspire to preserve it.

Third, we cherish the universality of our health-care system, and aspire to strengthen it.

Fourth, we are a caring people, and aspire to support people who need our help.

This budget makes our values and beliefs stronger.

Canadians are a caring people. We offer a helping hand to people who find themselves out of work.

Yet social assistance programs can produce unintended consequences.

In Canada, too many people feel trapped on welfare.

A single mother with one child who takes a low-income job can lose almost 80 cents of each dollar she earns. That's because of higher taxes, and reduced benefits for things like drug and dental coverage.

Some people call this the welfare wall.

Mr. Speaker, it is time to help people over the welfare wall and on to a better, more prosperous life for themselves and their families.

This budget will invest more than $550 million a year to establish a Working Income Tax Benefit, known as WITB.

Helping people achieve a better life for themselves and their families. That's our Canada.

For many years, Mr. Speaker, I have worked with the parents of severely disabled children.

I know that many other members of this House have as well.

Parents of children with severe disabilities face emotional strains and financial hardships that can, at times, be overwhelming. They worry, Mr. Speaker, about how they will take care of their children in the future.

They need our help. Based on our Expert Panel's recommendations, we will invest $140 million over the next two years to establish a Registered Disability Savings Plan, similar to an RESP.

Compassion and understanding for persons with disabilities, and their families. That's our Canada.

Secondly, we take pride in the spectacular beauty of our country, and aspire to preserve it.

From the majestic peaks of the Rocky Mountains to the rugged shores of Newfoundland and Labrador, many of the most beautiful places on earth are in Canada.

How fortunate we are to call this vast, beautiful country our home. We must preserve and protect it.

In total, Budget 2007 invests $4.5 billion for environmental initiatives.

We are investing $225 million with the Nature Conservancy of Canada to protect up to 2,000 square kilometres of ecologically sensitive land.

Dedicating $30 million to safeguard the Great Bear Rainforest on the central coast of British Columbia.

Dedicating $10 million over two years to conserve ecologically important lands in the Northwest Territories, which will protect an important part of our boreal forest.

And strengthening enforcement of environmental protection laws by increasing the number of enforcement officers by 50 per cent.

Protecting the natural beauty of our majestic land. That's our Canada.

Mr. Speaker, Canada has one of the largest supplies of fresh water on the planet, and beautiful oceans on three sides of our vast country.

We cannot take these resources for granted.

We must protect our precious lakes, rivers and oceans. That's why we are announcing our new National Water Strategy.

This comprehensive initiative will improve water quality in places such as the Lake Winnipeg Basin, the Great Lakes Basin and Lake Simcoe.

All Canadians deserve clean, safe drinking water.

We will provide a tough regulatory regime and standards for drinking water on First Nations reserves.

We will also work with provinces and municipalities to improve municipal sewer and water facilities.

Our National Water Strategy will also help support the sustainable development and protection of our oceans. It creates nine marine protected areas, including Sable Island on the East Coast, the Scott Islands on the Pacific Coast and Lancaster Sound in the Eastern Arctic.

Our National Water Strategy will provide funding for our Coast Guard to buy and maintain six new vessels.

Fresh, clean water. That's our Canada.

We want cleaner water. We also want cleaner air.

We're taking action. We are introducing a program that provides rebates to people who buy fuel-efficient or alternative fuel vehicles. We will also sponsor initiatives that take old, polluting cars off the road, and introduce a Green Levy on gas guzzlers.

Environmental measures in this budget will improve the air we all breathe. They don't involve any accounting sleight-of-hand or complicated purchases of energy credits from distant countries like Russia.

Clean air, right here. That's our Canada.

Third, we cherish the universality of our health care system, and aspire to strengthen it.

The people of Saskatchewan have contributed much to Canada - but perhaps nothing as fundamental to our Canadian fabric as the concept of universally accessible health care.

Our government is providing a total of $2.6 billion in new health-care investments, as well as an increase in health transfers. This means our government will transfer $44 billion in health-care funding to the provinces and territories over the next two years.

Mr. Speaker, the time has come to modernize our health-care system.

Canada needs electronic health records. They will help our health providers to be more efficient, improve the quality of care provided and reduce the chance of medication errors. This all adds up to reduced wait times.

We are investing $400 million to help fund eHealth initiatives and up to an additional $600 million to reduce wait times.

A modern, cutting-edge health care system. That's our Canada.

Mr. Speaker, a vaccine exists today that helps prevent cancer of the cervix.

This budget provides $300 million to provincial and territorial governments to enable them to introduce cervical cancer immunization programs. Let the day come when people look back on this cancer as a disease we have conquered - in the same way we do polio today.

Promoting women's health. That's our Canada.

Health care goes beyond physical well-being.

We must reach out in practical and compassionate ways to those struggling with mental illness. The funding provided in this budget will establish and support a Canadian Mental Health Commission to lead the development of a national mental health strategy. I am very pleased to announce that the Honourable Michael Kirby has agreed to serve as chair of this important commission.

Respect and dignity for people with mental illness. That's our Canada.

Fourth, we are a caring people, and aspire to support people who need our help.

Canadians are generous. When it comes to determining what good causes to support, we believe individual Canadians can make that decision far better than government.

Mr. Speaker, last year's budget improved incentives to make donations of securities to public charities like hospitals and universities.

The response from Canadians has been overwhelming.

At least $150 million in donations of securities for hospitals and health care. More than $50 million for education, and $20 million for the arts.

In Budget 2006, we promised to explore developing a similar incentive for donations of securities to private foundations.

We did. Now, we are expanding this program to encourage donations to private foundations as well.

Mr. Speaker, there are stockpiles of pharmaceuticals for fighting diseases like AIDS and tuberculosis that are going unused. There are also people in Africa and developing countries around the world who need these medicines.

That just doesn't make sense.

That's why this budget includes a tax incentive for donations of pharmaceuticals to developing countries.

Giving generously to others. That's our Canada.

Budget 2007 is creating a better Canada by helping the vulnerable, preserving our environment, strengthening our health-care system and helping Canadians contribute to those in need.

A Stronger Canada

Mr. Speaker, last Fall we launched a long-term economic plan for Canada, called Advantage Canada. It was designed to improve our quality of life, and to make Canada a world leader for today and future generations.

Advantage Canada promotes five competitive economic advantages we need to succeed in today's global economy:

A Fiscal Advantage;

A Tax Advantage;

A Knowledge Advantage;

An Entrepreneurial Advantage; and

An Infrastructure Advantage.

It all starts with a Fiscal Advantage.

Mr. Speaker, we're lowering our national mortgage by $9.2 billion - on top of the $13.2 billion we have put against the debt since elected.

In last November's Update, I promised Canadians would benefit directly from debt reduction. They will.

Through our Tax Back Guarantee, lower debt will mean lower interest payments, which will mean lower taxes.

Let me be clear. Every dollar saved from lower interest payments will be returned to Canadians through personal income tax reductions.

More money staying in Canadians' pockets, and less money lost to interest payments. That's our Canada.

Mr. Speaker, I hear it at the hockey arena. I hear it at the coffee shops. I hear it from people on the street.

Taxes in Canada are way too high.

It's true. I know that as Finance Minister. I also know it as the father of three teenage boys.

Across Canada, parents struggle daily with the challenge of raising a family. They work hard, play by the rules, teach their children right from wrong, and hope for a tomorrow that's a bit better than today.

With higher costs of living, housing and energy, it isn't easy.

We need to make it more affordable for people to have children and to raise them.

There were many personal tax relief options we could have pursued in this budget.

We made a choice.

We chose to support hard-working families.

In Budget 2007, we are creating a Working Families Tax Plan. This plan has four components.

First of all, for families with children, it includes a brand new $2,000-per-child tax credit for children under 18 that will help families to get ahead.

Here's an example of what it will mean.

A single-earner family with two children with an income of $37,000 per year will save $620. That's a 23 per cent reduction in their federal taxes, Mr. Speaker.

That's money families can use to buy new shoes or clothes for their children. Or save for a new computer. Or even to buy a new pair of hockey skates - just like I did yesterday for my son John.

Secondly, we are ending the marriage penalty for single-earner families through an increase of the spousal and dependant amounts to the same level as the basic personal amount. Mr. Speaker, it is good public policy to encourage commitment and marriage, not penalize it. That's what we're doing.

Third, parents across this country are struggling with the costs of post-secondary education. We're helping parents save for their children's education by strengthening the RESP program.

Fourth, seniors on a fixed income are often forced to make choices to get by. We're helping seniors by raising the age limit for RPPs and RRSPs to 71 from 69.

These measures build upon the tax relief provided under our Tax Fairness Plan. It increased the age credit amount to benefit low-and middle-income seniors. It also allowed pension income splitting for pensioners beginning this year. Together, these actions put $1 billion a year back into the pockets of Canadian seniors, who earned and deserve every penny.

This government has introduced a total of nearly $38 billion of tax relief benefiting hard-working Canadians for this and the next two fiscal years.

Mr. Speaker, our Tax Advantage is about more than personal income tax relief. It is also about providing an advantage to our businesses as well.

Our House finance and industry committees heard about how valiantly Canadian manufacturers have weathered the "perfect storm" of a high dollar, low-cost international competition and an economic slowdown in the U.S.

For personal income tax relief, we chose to focus on helping families. For corporate tax relief, we chose to help Canadian manufacturers succeed, by focusing on our capital cost allowance system.


Generally, Canada's capital cost allowance system allows businesses to write off their investments in manufacturing equipment over roughly seven years. Accelerated capital cost allowances permit a faster write-off to encourage economic investment and to create jobs.

It's time to support our manufacturers through a dramatic, new capital cost allowance incentive.

From now until the end of 2008, we will allow manufacturers to completely write off their new investments in equipment over a two-year period, resulting in $1.3 billion in tax savings for our job creators over the next three fiscal years.

This is like a shot of adrenaline for our manufacturers, Mr. Speaker. It will help Canadian businesses invest in new technology and better compete on the world stage.

Canada's job creators need modern technology to be more efficient, and buildings that allow them to grow. Changes we're making to the capital cost allowance system will shorten the write-off period for computers and non-residential buildings.

Our world is changing, Mr. Speaker. Improving our capital cost allowance system also means striking the right balance.

For oil sands and other industries, we will be phasing in the accelerated capital cost allowance to promote promising new technologies, green technologies like carbon capture and storage.

It follows that we are balancing this by phasing out the accelerated capital cost allowance for general investment in the oil sands by 2015.

Mr. Speaker, the watchword for Canada's new government when it comes to taxes is fairness.

Tax fairness means paying your fair share. Regardless of where a company is registered, or where a head office is located.

We improved the fairness of our tax system in our last budget and in our Tax Fairness Plan. We're taking new steps today.

Step one. We're putting an end to the practice of corporations borrowing in Canada to fund business operations abroad, then using the interest deductions to offset Canadian income.

It is a practice that has resulted in Canadian taxpayers indirectly subsidizing the foreign operations of multinational corporations, and paying the price in reduced business activity and job losses in Canada.

No more. The interest expense on debt incurred to acquire shares of a foreign affiliate will no longer be deductible.

Step two. We are providing the Canada Revenue Agency the funding it needs to detect tax avoidance through offshore tax havens, and to ensure that every company pays its fair share of tax.

Let me add, Mr. Speaker, if creative tax planners find other loopholes, we will close those loopholes as well.

Every time.

The free ride is over. Everyone's going to pay their fair share.

Tax fairness for everyone. That's our Canada.

Add it all together, Mr. Speaker, and in little over a year, we have announced tax relief worth $3.6 billion for Canadian businesses for this and the next two fiscal years.

Mr. Speaker, we recognized in Advantage Canada the need for a Knowledge Advantage, so that Canadians can compete more successfully in our modern, global economy.

We set a bold goal - but an achievable one: to have the best-educated, most-skilled and most flexible workforce in the world.

Actions we are taking today will help build that workforce tomorrow.

First of all, we're investing over $1.3 billion in new money for science and technology research.

Secondly, we're dramatically increasing financial support for post-secondary education.

Third, we're providing new funding for skills training. The result will be that any Canadian who needs training should be able to get training.

Fourth, we're providing the greatest number of scholarships ever granted to our graduate students through the Canada Graduate Scholarships program. These prestigious awards are worth $17,500 per year for master's students, and $35,000 annually for doctoral students, for up to three years.

To recognize the outstanding contributions of Canadians who have made a real and lasting impact on our lives, we plan to dedicate these prestigious scholarships to the memory of Sir Frederick Banting and Dr. Charles Best, Alexander Graham Bell and Joseph-Armand Bombardier.

Mr. Speaker, we are not just funding scholarships. We are helping to create the next generation of leaders. Young Canadians who will make us proud, make Canada strong, and the world a better place through their achievements.

Finally, in addition to creating a future generation of leaders, we are also investing in leading research institutions. Budget 2007 sets aside the funding necessary to make that happen, and will help fund leading-edge institutions like the Life Sciences Research Institute in Nova Scotia, the National Optics Institute in Quebec, the Perimeter Institute in Ontario, the Canada School of Sustainable Energy in Alberta, and B.C.'s Brain Research Centre, among others.

Small businesses and entrepreneurs are the motors of our modern economy. That's why we are working to achieve an Entrepreneurial Advantage.

That includes a plan to strengthen our capital markets, helping Canadian entrepreneurs access the money they need to grow.

Creating an Entrepreneurial Advantage also means supporting our two million small businesses.

They work hard. They create jobs. They make our country work.

The last thing they need is excessive government red tape and needless regulation to slow them down.

This budget contains a package of initiatives to help Canadian small businesses.

For example, we are reducing the number of annual tax filings and remittances for more than 350,000 small businesses. For some smaller businesses, the number of tax filings and remittances could drop from 34 to as few as 10 - a 70 per cent decrease.

We will reduce the business paper burden by 20 per cent by November 2008, following the excellent example set by the government of British Columbia. The Secretary of State for Small Business and Tourism will lead this effort.

Farmers, fishermen and -women, and small business owners all stand to benefit from the first increase in the lifetime capital gains exemption in nearly 20 years. We are increasing this exemption to $750,000 from $500,000, effective today.

I would like to acknowledge the leadership of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business in championing this reform, and the effort to reduce the business paper burden by 20 per cent.

Mr. Speaker, in today's knowledge economy, a strong economy and clean energy are not mutually exclusive. One of the goals set out in Advantage Canada is for this country to become a green technology leader.

Budget 2007 includes $2 billion in incentives for renewable fuel production over the next seven years. The results will be a fresh energy supply, new jobs in our growing Canadian renewable fuels sector, including biofuels, and cleaner air.

This initiative could mean new opportunities for our agricultural products, and support for our agriculture industry in the process.

Canada's farmers don't just feed our country, they feed the world. It's time we provided the kind of support that these decent, hard-working people of integrity deserve.

We're providing $1 billion in new direct assistance to farmers through this budget, and we are replacing the top tier of the CAIS program with a new savings account plan.

Over the last two budgets, we have delivered $4.5 billion in new assistance to Canada's farmers.

We've heard from farmers. We've listened to them. We've acted.

Mr. Speaker, in planning for the future, this budget looked to the history of this country to help us to achieve an Infrastructure Advantage.

From Sir John A. Macdonald's national railroad, to Louis St. Laurent's St. Lawrence Seaway, to John Diefenbaker's vision of the North, transportation and infrastructure have connected our great country. United us. Shaped who we are.

Today, there are new opportunities to connect our nation, including those made possible through the new $1.5-billion Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change. For example, the construction of an east-west hydroelectricity grid will deliver cleaner energy, strengthen our economy and build on our position as the world leader in the production of the cleanest form of energy in the world: hydroelectric power.

This budget also builds Canada, with more than $16 billion in infrastructure funding. Federal funding for infrastructure over the next seven years will be $33 billion-the largest such investment in Canadian history.

Mr. Speaker, Budget 2007 takes concrete action to lower taxes and position Canada for global success, as we take initial steps to implement Advantage Canada, our long-term economic plan.

A Safer Canada

Mr. Speaker, I've spoken about building a better Canada and a stronger Canada.

These alone are insufficient. We must also make Canada safer.

Canada is admired the world over as a safe, law-abiding society.

We must keep it that way.

We cherish our safety and security. Mr. Speaker, reading stories of car jackings, or home invasions, or reckless and random murders in our cities upsets all of us. Because that's not our Canada.

Many serious crimes link back to the drug trade. Grow ops or meth labs are being found in residential neighbourhoods. Gangs distribute those drugs. Then innocent people get hurt as a result of gang warfare.

That's unacceptable. Today, we are launching a new National Anti-Drug Strategy to combat the use of illegal drugs.

We are also providing funding to protect our most precious asset - our children - from online sexual exploitation and to assist investigators in suspected cases of human trafficking.

In addition, the government will put a plan in place to combat white-collar crime that includes attracting and retaining the best-qualified police and other expert resources to the RCMP's Integrated Market Enforcement Teams.

Mr. Speaker, we have a long tradition of reaching outside our borders to those who are less fortunate.

We will increase our foreign aid by nearly $900 million over the next two years, consistent with our commitment to double international assistance by 2010-11.

Canadians are a peace-loving people. We are all proud of the role Canada plays across the globe, restoring and protecting the peace.

Yet those who would harm us, and harm those we protect, do not share our values.

They do not want the peace we protect. They disregard human rights. They shatter people's lives - forever.

Our history has shown that we are best at protecting others when our Forces are strong, and our soldiers are supported.

When our soldiers can count on their government as much as their government counts on them.

It was 1917. Entire villages had been destroyed in northern France and Belgium.

Our enemy was entrenched, ready and confident.

On that cold spring morning, tens of thousands of Canadian soldiers - men from places like Amherst, Nova Scotia, Calgary, Alberta, Lachute, Quebec, and Wallacetown, Ontario - came to win back freedom.

In one of the most dramatic battles of the First World War, those brave Canadians succeeded where other nations had tried and failed.

Canadians had taken Vimy Ridge by afternoon. More than 3,500 of them made the ultimate sacrifice.

The respect Canada earned on April 9, 1917, endures 90 years later.

This brings me, Mr. Speaker, to our brave veterans and soldiers serving Canada today. And what this budget will mean for them.

$60 million to increase the field operations allowance for soldiers;

Five new centres for veterans to help Canadian Forces members and their families deal with stress injuries related to their military service;

The creation of the position of Veterans' Ombudsman to ensure that the services delivered by the Department of Veterans Affairs meet the service standards set out in our new Veterans' Bill of Rights; and

Funding to implement improvements to services for veterans.

Mr. Speaker, in proposing these measures, we are ever mindful of the torch being passed from yesterday's veterans to today's heroes.

Many Canadians who have been to the Netherlands know the warm greeting of an elderly person whose eyes say "thank you" to this day.

Canadians helped liberate the Netherlands in World War II, bringing a new beginning to that country.

Let our generation do the same for the people of Afghanistan.

The need is most urgent for Afghan women.

Years of Taliban oppression left women hurt, and their spirits broken.

We must help them. We are helping them.

Our prime minister recently committed $200 million to the reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan. Mr. Speaker, this budget confirms that funding.

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