Very good. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I, Pat Martin, move:
That the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics undertake a review of matters related to the Mulroney Airbus libel settlement; including any and all new evidence, testimony, and information not available at the time of the settlement so as to determine if there were violations of ethical and code of conduct standards by any public office holders; and to report to the House on its findings, conclusions and recommendations.
Mr. Chairman, I have some brief rationale and explanation as to why I put this motion forward. I believe Canadians deserve some straight answers to some very simple questions. I'm very concerned that a public inquiry may either never take place at all if Mr. Schreiber is sent out of Canada, or if such a public inquiry does take place, it may be so massive and cumbersome that it may in fact collapse under its own weight before Canadians get some of these straight answers to very simple questions.
I put it to you, Mr. Chairman, that the matter is properly before this committee. I won't go into that at any length because I appreciate your ruling after your investigation of the matter that we have an obligation, as the ethics committee, to ensure that the House of Commons and all public office holders are operating at the highest ethical standards and that the codes of conduct are thorough and robust enough to ensure there is in fact that appropriate action.
The last point I will make on why I think it's important for our committee to study this is that we also need to visit the regulations dealing with lobbyists on Parliament Hill, because surely at the root of the whole Schreiber kickback Airbus scandal, or the allegations associated with them, is one rogue lobbyist who is accused of lining pockets and peddling influence around Parliament Hill.
Even though we tried to address the regulation of lobbyists in the Federal Accountability Act, those regulations have never been implemented. To this day, nothing has really changed that would preclude another person from peddling influence in the same fashion as these allegations.
So if for no other reason than to make recommendations to ensure that our code of conduct is robust enough to keep public office holders to the highest ethical standards, and to revisit and perhaps amend the regulations pertaining to lobbyists, our committee should get busy and review these allegations—not in the context of guilt and innocence and accusing people, etc.; that's not our job, our expertise, and it's not our mandate. We can concentrate on, and make some real substantial progress on, the code of conduct and ethical standards of all public office holders.
The last thing I will say is that timeliness is everything here. Timeliness is of the essence, not just because we're dead up against the extradition of Karlheinz Schreiber on the first of next month, but because all of us in this room have been tainted by these allegations, by the terrible optics of the possibility of a former Prime Minister taking bags full of cash in secret hotel room meetings. That image in the public's mind stains every one of us in this room, and it also further harms the jaded perception the electorate has of politicians and their democratic institutions generally.
So for those reasons, I appeal to my fellow colleagues on the committee to support this motion to undertake this study.
Thank you.