“REVITALIZE CANADA” 

Join the Grassroots Movement

A Message to Fellow Canadians

My name is Frank Stronach, and I developed this 7-point program out of a deep concern for the future of Canada.  

I came to Canada as a young immigrant in the 1950s and started a one-man tool and die shop in a rented garage. By sharing profits with my employees, I was able to build my company into one of the world’s largest automotive companies, Magna International Inc. Today, Magna has more than 180,000 employees at 448 manufacturing and R&D centres in 34 different countries around the world.   

But lately I’ve become worried about the state of our country. Skyrocketing debt. A growing income gap between the wealthy and Canadian workers. Falling living standards. 

These are just a few of the critical problems facing Canadians today. Together, they represent a grave threat to our future health and prosperity.  

We can’t keep going down this road.   

I believe most Canadians would come together in support of a set of core principles that could help kickstart our economy, boost living standards, tackle out-of-control government spending and debt, and create a brighter future.  

But first we have to change direction. And we have to act now.  

The 7-point program outlined here contains core principles that will help put our country back on the path to prosperity and leave future generations with a legacy they can build on.

THE CANADIAN ECONOMIC CHARTER

OF RIGHTS & RESPONSIBILITIES

The following are the key policy recommendations that form the 7-point program for a better and more prosperous Canada:

Creating a Movement of Concerned Canadians

The present political and economic system in Canada is not working. It has led to a large and growing divide between the rich and the working class, with more and more money being held by fewer and fewer people.

The 7 key policy recommendations outlined here represent the minimum course of action we can take. There is much more we need to do, in areas such as the environment and reviving our manufacturing sector. We also have a growing number of hungry and homeless people. No one in Canada should go to bed hungry and everyone should have access to shelter and health care. These are the minimum standards of a civilized society.

But if we implement these seven key recommendations, we will take a giant step forward in terms of restoring Canada’s financial health and prosperity. The road to economic recovery will be long and hard, but if we don’t take action today, the consequences will be much more severe in the years ahead.

I invite you to join me and thousands of other concerned Canadians who want to take action. If enough Canadians joined together and rallied around these core principles for creating a healthier and more prosperous society, we might finally get Canada back on a strong and stable footing for the sake of our children and our grandchildren.