
19 stances tracked · 1 shift
Michael Ma apologized for appearing dismissive of forced labour, condemned forced labour "in all its forms," and clarified his parliamentary questioning referred to auto manufacturing in Shenzhen, not Xinjiang, acknowledging the seriousness of forced-labour concerns in supply chains.
Michael Ma expressed skepticism about claims that Chinese-made electric vehicle parts are produced with forced labour, pressing a witness for firsthand evidence and treating such allegations as potentially hearsay unless direct, on-the-ground proof is provided.
Michael Ma condemns forced labour in all forms and explicitly supports Canada's rigorous forced‑labour import laws, saying he is proud to support the government's work to eradicate forced labour from supply chains and enforce Canada's import prohibition.
Voting Yea means supporting a statutory increase in GST/HST credit amounts and the creation of deemed-payment mechanisms to deliver larger and periodic GSTC transfers to eligible low- and modest-income individuals and families (including shared-custody parent adjustments).
Voting Yea means supporting increased federal spending/transfers to provide targeted cost-of-living relief through larger and advance GSTC payments, accepting the fiscal cost to deliver near-term support.
Support government spending package for 2026
Voting Nay means opposing enactment of the supplementary appropriations, which would block or delay the specific expenditures in the Supplementary Estimates (A).
Voting Yea means supporting legal protection for Canada's supply management import controls — preventing increases in tariff rate quotas or reductions in over‑quota tariffs for dairy, poultry and eggs to preserve domestic producer protection.