Thank you.
Welcome, Mr. Reid, Mr. Leadbeater, and colleagues.
As Mr. Martin alluded to earlier, we seem to have been banging at this door for a long time in this country, and I thought all of us had come to the conclusion that it was really time to move forward. We've had over 25 years of experience with this legislation, with this concept; we've learned some things, and it's time to move on.
If I can just state where I think we were--and Mr. Leadbeater and I were discussing this twenty years ago, it seems--public information should be public. That's the principle.
There are going to be some exceptions, but they should be limited, focused, related to injury, and subject even then to a public interest override, and the decisions of the bureaucracy, the administration, should be reviewable by an independent office. That's the principle.
And the last one, I think, is that a parliamentary officer should not have order powers, because a parliamentary officer is an agent of the members of Parliament. It's Parliament that can make its own decisions. It has full powers. It can even put people in jail if it likes. But that's the general principle.
The practical experience we've had is that the original notion that this would simply, initially, have the public bureaucracy make everything open, without having to go through our commissioner, except for a few trigger points that would give pause to consider, has been frustrated by--without putting fault on any individual or even any conspiracy of individuals--bureaucracy being large and slow, and there are political issues and fears. So it just slows it down and it hasn't worked the way it was meant to.
So over the years, and as recently as just over a year ago, your office was asked to make some specific recommendations, based on the history of the office, as to how to improve this, how to break the logjams, how to open things up, how to reach Mr. Leadbeater's transparency. You did that. You created the open government act. You brought it forward as an example to the ethics and information and privacy committee. It endorsed it. The Conservative Party put it in black and white in its election platform, as it spoke about it being a key part of the Accountability Act, which would be the first legislation the government brought forward if it was elected. It was elected, it brought forward an accountability act, and it didn't have the open government act in it. That's what I think we're going to have some real discussion on when we talk about amendments and how to improve the Accountability Act, which we think has many positive things to it.
But I must take just slight issue, respectfully, with Mr. Poilievre, with respect to this actually giving more powers. The issue isn't that more authorities are brought into the ambit of the act. It's the type of exemption that's created that causes the problem, rather than the number of further authorities, and it's this principle of forever, without an injury test, without potential for a public interest override and without a review by the independent--remember, independent of government, not independent of Parliament--parliamentary officer, on behalf of all members of Parliament, having a confidential look to ensure that there is injury and there isn't some overriding public interest.
That's the beauty and the magic of the act that should operate, as one of Commissioner Reid's predecessors said, “as a Maytag repairman”. Once everybody got into the swing of it, it would just happen naturally. And in fact, having greater access, getting into the habit of making information readily available, and organizing it in a record system so it could do that would make government decisions much better, because government would act with itself on full information because it would be in the practice and habit of organizing it in a proper way.
So, Commissioner Reid, I would just put to you that I think what you've done is given us recommendations that could de-fang or disarm the bill as it is now with respect to access to information, but if I take your comments--and certainly I look at the history of the last year--I take it that your main recommendation would be to incorporate the open government act into the Accountability Act.