Greg McLean

Top issues are the affordability crisis, the economic threats from Donald Trump, and the Liberals' hostile approach to responsible resource development in Alberta. Conservatives have released detailed policies to address those issues - and others. Go to www.gregmclean.ca/policy.

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Affordability & Housing

Fuel and transportation costs

Conservative's promises

Commit $50M to removing tolls on the Confederation Bridge

"Conservative Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman announced today that a Conservative government led by Pierre Poilievre will scrap the tolls on the Confederation Bridge to save residents and businesses over $50 every time they travel to the mainland." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

"This $50 million commitment will cover the operating costs for the Confederation Bridge which is currently paid for with tolls. It will end the unfair tax that Islanders have to pay just to leave their own province, keeping more of their money in their pockets." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Review government support for the Wood Islands-Caribou ferry to Nova Scotia

"Conservatives will also immediately conduct a review of federal support for the Wood Islands-Caribou ferry." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Home construction and supply

Conservative's promise

Incentivise municipalities to free up land, speed up permits, and cut development charges

"Conservatives will also incentivize municipalities to free up land, speed up permits and cut development charges to build 15% more homes each year." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Home ownership

Conservative's promise

Remove the GST on the sale of new homes up to $1.3M, and cut $8B of current government housing initiatives to pay for it

"A Poilievre government would fund this homebuyers’ tax cut by eliminating $8 billion of the Liberals’ bureaucratic housing schemes that have only driven up housing prices. Conservatives will also incentivize municipalities to free up land, speed up permits and cut development charges to build 15% more homes each year." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Tax measures and rebates

Conservative's promise

Drop the tax rate on the lowest income tax bracket from 15% to 12.75%

"Poilievre announced he will cut income tax by 15%, dropping the tax rate on the lowest income tax bracket from 15% to 12.75%, meaning the average Canadian worker earning $57,000 will save $900, with two income families saving $1,800 a year. It’s time to let Canadians keep more of what they earn." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Climate Change & the Environment

Marine conservation

Conservative's promise

Restore the seal harvest

"Today, Clifford Small, Conservative candidate for Central Newfoundland, announced that Pierre Poilievre’s Conservative Government will restore the seal harvest to protect harvesters’ jobs, and take back control of the seal and sea lion population that is destroying our fish stocks." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Jobs, Businesses, & Labour

Investment

Conservative's promise

Allow Canadians to contribute an extra $5,000/year to Tax-Free Savings Accounts, so long as the money supports Canadian companies

"Nothing about Canadians’ existing TFSAs would change. The existing $7,000 limit would remain, but Canadians will now be able to contribute up to an additional $5,000 a year, if that money supports Canadian companies that employ Canadian workers and pay Canadian taxes. The tax system already defines Canadian investments, and a Poilievre government will create a definition that lets financial institutions and advisors label which stocks, mutual funds and other investments can go into your Canada First TFSA Top-Up." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Public Safety, Policing, & the Justice System

Criminal sentencing

Conservative's promise

Set mandatory life sentences for anyone convicted of fentanyl trafficking, 5 counts of human trafficking, or importing 10 illegal firearms

"Specifically, Poilievre said he will impose life sentences for anyone who is convicted of:

  1. 5 or more counts of human trafficking.
  2. Importing or exporting ten or more illegal firearms.
  3. Fentanyl trafficking."

conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Seniors, Disabilities, & Retirement

Retirement savings and income

Conservative's promises

Allow working seniors to earn up to $34K tax-free

"Allow working seniors to earn up to $34,000 tax free—$10k more than now." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Allow seniors the option of keeping savings growing in RRSPs until age 73, up from 71
Keep the retirement age at 65

Sovereignty, Foreign Relations, & the United States

Defending Canada's north

Conservative's promises

Double the size of the 1st Patrol Group of the Canadian Rangers, to 4,000 Rangers
Acquire two additional polar icebreakers, and deliver two icebreakers currently being built by 2029

"Acquire two additional polar icebreakers for the Royal Canadian Navy. Poilievre also committed to delivering the two polar icebreakers the Seaspan and Davie shipyards are now building for the Coast Guard by 2029, while the Liberals refuse to provide a timeline." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Build a permanent Arctic military base in Iqaluit within two years

"Build at least one permanent Arctic military base within two years: CFB Iqaluit, Canada’s first permanent Arctic military base since the Cold War." — conservative.ca, retrieved 2025-04-17

Biography

submitted by the candidate or their team
Elected in 2019; re-elected 2021. Focus in Parliament on responsible energy & environment policy, and Finance & Economy including taxes, deficit & debt levels, and effective investments to increase productivity & prosperity. Formerly a financial professional. Married, four sons.

Work In Parliament

In the just-ended Parliament (44th Parliament), Greg was a member of the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, an important policy area right now with unsustainable numbers of government approved immigration levels, and admittedly unknown-to-the-government numbers of temporary residents, persons whose visitor permits have expired but have not left the country, and those who came to Canada on student visas but stayed illegally. This casual approach to managing immigration puts pressure on infrastructure such as housing, health care, jobs and education. Slow processing and sometimes impossible requirements (such as accessing biometrics in war-torn countries) also puts refugees at risk of harm as they wait in countries like Afghanistan or Sudan for paperwork to be processed while they live in danger. Immigration is important to Canada. It built our country. But this government has managed it so badly that many Canadians are losing faith in responsible immigration.

Greg previously served on the Environment and Sustainable Development Committee where he took - and continues to take - a strong interest in policy that balances environmental protection with consumer interests and the prosperity of Canada's responsible energy industry. That focus includes work in advancing Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS), hydrogen, nuclear energy, and the Canadian-made technology that achieves emissions reductions in the traditional oil and gas industry along with other industries (such as cement). There is also exciting new technology being developed - much of it here in Alberta - that turns waste carbon into useful industrial and consumer products. Greg believes we can find an appropriate balance that meets Canada's goals - and global goals - in emissions control, while providing reliable, clean energy to power our world.

Greg takes an active interest in financial policies and often asks questions to Ministers in the House on issues including government waste, the accumulation of excess deficits and debt, high and poorly designed taxation, badly structured, costly programs that don’t meet goals, slush funds and sole-sourced contracts that enrich government’s friends at taxpayers’ expense, and the never-ending spending that has directly led to high inflation and high interest rates that have crippled all Canadians with an unsustainable affordability crisis.

Greg often participates in both the Natural Resources and Finance committee meetings where he speaks out on issues relating to responsible energy production, environmental sustainability, and on government spending and waste, tax policy, debt and deficit, and the nation’s financial strategy.

Professional Career

Before being elected as the MP for Calgary Centre in 2019, Greg worked as a financial professional for 20 years. His work put him in close contact with Alberta’s vital oil and gas sector and with technology start-ups, giving him a first-hand understanding of what it takes for hard-working Calgarians to invest, risk, build, and succeed. Greg uses his financial background to bring on-the-ground expertise in finance, business and resource development to Parliament. Greg has spent considerable time working with his colleagues (from all parties, across the country) informing them of the facts about Canada’s responsible resource development, including the significant strides the industry has taken toward sustainable development such as lowering methane and CO2 emissions, land reclamation, water use, and the many other reasons that Canadians should prefer Canadian oil over environmentally and ethically inferior imports.

Personal Life

Greg has a Bachelor of Commerce Degree from the University of Alberta, and an MBA from the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario. Together, Greg and his wife Ruth Pogue have a combined family of four sons, three of whom expanded the family by marrying in 2024. Greg and Ruth have also welcomed their beloved dog Rocky to the family. Greg is a big music fan, and enjoys skiing, hiking, biking, and everything else Calgary and the Rocky Mountains have to offer.

Reason for running

submitted by the candidate or their team
In 2019 when I ran, the most pressing issue was to get pipelines built. If we had done it then, Canada would be stronger today to resist Trump's threats - a more prosperous country with good jobs and higher incomes. The Liberals blocked that economic progress at every juncture.

When the Liberals came to office in 2015, they immediately blocked Energy East and Northern Gateway pipelines, and put in place legislation to block other infrastructure (including LNG, mines and ports). Those decisions have cost Canadians. We have high inflation (driven by wasteful government spending), rising unemployment, declining wages, an affordability crisis, low productivity and generally dismal performance compared to other OECD countries.

And we are at the mercy of Donald Trump because we can't even deliver Canadian energy to Canadian customers without going through the USA; let alone deliver it to overseas customers to diverse our exports and reduce our dependence on the US.

Now the single biggest way we could improve our economic performance and contribute to worldwide security, environmental advancement, and diversifying our trade beyond the United States is -- to build pipelines!

Why have the Liberals worked against this for all these years? Canada cannot continue down this path of economic decline. Conservatives have policies to reverse these damaging decisions, build our own sovereign economy, and improve the affordability and quality of life for all Canadians. Visit www.gregmclean.ca/policy to see for yourself.


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