Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Ladies and gentlemen, members of the committee, we are pleased to appear before you here this morning. I am the President of the Government Relations Institute of Canada and I am accompanied by our Vice-President, Lisa Stilborn.
Members, we represent the lobbyists you don't read a lot about. The members of our association are registered lobbyists, and you already know who we are, what public offices we've held, who our clients are, and what policies, rules, regulations, or legislation we're trying to effect. You already know quite a bit about our membership.
Our board has an interesting cross-section of pretty much all the people who lobby in Canada. We have people on our board who represent Bell Canada, the Canadian Medical Association, the Canadian Cancer Society, the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers, the Credit Union Central of Canada, and a bunch of others who, like me, are consultant lobbyists. We represent in some fashion almost all the people who are registered lobbyists.
To begin, I want to express our strong support for the principles underlying Bill C-2, namely transparency and accountability. Since its inception, our association has supported every attempt to make lobbying more transparent. We are supportive of almost all the elements of the changes that you're proposing to strengthen the Lobbyists Registration Act.
Before I get into specifics of the act, let me go back to the preamble of the Lobbyists Registration Act as it was initially formed. If you accept these principles, then you'll easily be guided to what can and should be done.
The preamble said:
WHEREAS free and open access to government is an important matter of public interest; AND WHEREAS lobbying public office holders is a legitimate activity; AND WHEREAS it is desirable that public office holders and the public be able to know who is attempting to influence government; AND WHEREAS a system for the registration of paid lobbyists should not impede free and open access to government....
This preamble reinforces the government's ongoing position that the lobbying profession is legal, ethical, and in the public interest—and we couldn't agree more.
We also support the majority of the changes in the act, including stronger investigative and enforcement provisions. The vast majority of the people we represent are fully compliant with the law. It's been our position for some time that more resources should be dedicated to enforce this law so that the actions of a small number don't tarnish the reputation of the whole industry. As a matter of fact, I would point out that none of the people involved in the Gomery commission had in fact registered.
Clearly, I can only say to you that we represent the lobbyists who register. We all know that over time there have been some who don't register. But I don't think the concept of resolving the problem of those who don't register by adding more requirements to those who do register is going to be of much help to you.
We support the creation of an independent and empowered commissioner of lobbying who is accountable to Parliament.
In terms of the other changes to the act, we really only have two comments that we would like to make, and then I'd like to propose an amendment.
On the five-year rule, everyone in industry understands that a cooling-off period is necessary. Will a five-year period be much better than a four-year period, a three-year period, or a two-year period?
The question that you are required to answer, as we are, is this. Will this prevent good and experienced people from entering the public service? That's the first part. As George Weber pointed out, will this prevent good public servants from working for good corporations, good associations, or good lobby firms that service good corporations or good associations?
The second one is the matter of recording contacts with senior public office holders and the concept of who, what, where, and when. If you ask your colleagues, I think you will find that our concern is legitimate. The question we ask all the time is this: Will this put a chill on meetings that are in the public interest? Will civil servants who should meet with clients we represent, with associations, and with corporations say they don't want to meet with people because it may be misconceived?
The more telling problem is this: Will this compromise commercial confidentiality? In my career, and others can attest to this, we have had examples of confidential conversations with deputy ministers and with ministers.
I'll give you two examples. When a corporation is considering a sensitive merger or acquisition, there have in the past been discussions with senior officials about the possible implications of these mergers or acquisitions and other more technical matters, particularly affecting drug companies or new vaccines on the market. To these, competitors should not be privy.
Least of all is the matter of everyone wanting to know who's doing what in Ottawa. There's a lot of that, and not all of who wants to know and what they want to know is in fact in the public interest.
You may want to ask yourself these questions. Who is it wants to know with the greatest of detail what a company and a deputy minister talked about, when it's already on the public record which policies, regulations and rules, and legislation these companies are trying to affect? When is the public interest to know balanced with privacy and commercial sensitivities? The other one, which we can only dream of as being a horror, is what level of speculation will follow disclosure, and how will everyone respond to the inquiries? What great number of access-to-information requests are we going to get after the tabling that company X met with department B? How many of these kinds of requests are you going to face?
Clearly there are some people in this community who want to know everything. They want to know everything that everybody ever says, and if you made a presentation concerning this legislation, they will follow up these normal requests by asking what the deputy minister said, and what you said, and what the deputy minister said in response.
The other ongoing consideration for you is that we want to ask you to consider your role in this process, because a lot of you are integral to public policy. It's interesting. I was once a member of Parliament, so I know a little bit about the kinds of things you do. We are not in competition with you. As a lobbyist I don't compete with members of Parliament; I do a very different job. You are faced, on a constant basis, with hundreds of inquiries in your offices. I represent five to seven or ten clients in a given year. I have the time to spend two days with a company to discuss matters with them. As my colleague has pointed out, associations have similar amounts of time. You don't have that amount of time to devote to a particular file. Very often the first thing we do on any particular level of interest is to deal with the local members of Parliament on that issue.
We want to move forward and ask you to consider whether the burden of these regulations will be increased for all registered lobbyists, for not-for-profit lobbyists, and for organizations and corporations. We want to propose that a lot of things have not yet in fact been absolutely settled.
In relation to one section--the section dealing with filing a return 15 days after the end of the month to describe the who, what, where, and when of the meeting--it seems to me that better legislation considering privacy requirements and commercial sensitivities would be for Parliament to adopt a law that says these things shall be done--none of us is opposed to doing them--but instead of writing down all of the details of how it should be done in the legislation, you might want to say that the individuals shall file returns in such fashion and time as are set out in the regulations and leave it to the commissioner of lobbying to determine whether it should be three months or whether there should be some exemptions for commercial sensitivities. We're very fearful that if you write the rules in as much detail as you have proposed in this legislation, then common-sense things and sensible requests to keep a matter confidential for two weeks or three months may not be possible.