In order to assess your qualifications, we must determine, as my colleague Ève-Mary said, the quality of your judgment. By writing this letter, I believe that you infringed on the privilege of Parliament to decide whether any given bill is good or not. This is interference. You are now a senior official. You have been appointed to a senior public service position. You have been a member of Parliament, which is not a blemish. We would be crazy around this table to say the contrary. Nothing prevents an MP from getting another job once they are no longer elected, we all agree. However, it is no longer the same job, it is no longer a partisan job.
As I quoted your own words when you talked about the Canadian Food Inspection Agency in 1996, no one has been appointed by the conservative government unless having references as a strong supporter of the Conservative Party. At that time, you were a Reform member so you knew what you were talking about. Today, you had barely been appointed when you immediately took position in support of a bill that is dear to the government. You are doing the government's job. The members, the parliamentary secretary, everybody says this is a very good bill. But you have just been appointed as a senior official and it is not your job to say wether a policy is good or not. Your job is to implement legislation once it is passed.
Did you not act hastily by stating your views while the bill had not gone through all parliamentary stages?