If we accept the logic of the chair that the only purpose of any proceeding is to investigate the conduct of current public office holders--and I don't--the only way to judge the conduct of those public officer holders is to compare their practices to the common practice. The common practice is defined by what all candidates for all parties do.
The amendment that the chair has ruled in order in a very wise ruling permits us to have a broader discussion about the practices of all the political parties. This is a discussion that the opposition has resisted for almost a year now, as we have been trying to get proceedings going in committees like this one on the subject of Elections Canada. As such, I have a book of these common practices. This is the book. There are more books like this one.
I'm not going to engage in the practice of filibustering and flipping through every single page in this book. But anybody who wants to read its contents is more than welcome to do so. I have been systematically laying it out on the floor of the House of Commons to show that the practices our party undertook, and for which this committee is attempting to persecute it, are the same practices that all parties have used to advance their electoral interests.
If we are going to discuss a motion to investigate the practices of just one party, the very least we can do as objective stewards of the public good is to compare those practices against the practices of other parties.
Mr. Chair, you have made it clear that it is possible for this committee to investigate political parties, even if those political parties, in your words, “are not public office holders”. This is an interesting interpretation. However, if we're going to allow one party to be investigated, then we have to allow all parties to be investigated, by logical extension.
If the opposition has nothing to fear, if all of its practices are as white and clean as they have claimed, then they should have no fear whatsoever of going ahead with a broad investigation that will bring their former candidates and their party officials before this committee to answer for their actions.
That is exactly what we have sought from the outset of this issue. We were the ones who sought an investigation at the PROC committee. When opposition members filibustered those efforts, we were disappointed. We attempted to persist, but unfortunately we are in a minority position on that committee. Then the opposition decided they would move the discussion over here so they could rule any scrutiny of their electoral practices out of order.
First of all, the average Canadian would say.... The average Canadian doesn't care, let's be honest. But if for some reason that average citizen had committed some sort of heinous crime and his punishment was to be dragged into this committee room to watch these proceedings, I think he would tell you that if one party's practices were going to be invested, then why not just have all parties' practices investigated? That is what we have sought from the outset.
What is so ironic about this is that we have members in this room who claim to be very anxious about getting on with this public investigation at the committee level. However, those same members from those same parties have voted against having such hearings. If they had voted last September in favour of our motion to open up the scrutiny to all political parties, then the hearings would not only have started, they probably would have ended by now.
That would have been a good thing for Canadians, because the public scrutiny you purport to seek would have occurred. It would have been a bad thing for the opposition parties, because their hypocrisy would have been made naked for all eyes to see--and what an ugly sight that is.