Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm glad I came today to substitute for Mr. Siksay.
Thank you, Mr. Marleau, for being here, but thank you also for what constitutes a really good try at a very difficult job. I can tell you without exaggeration there was a great wave of optimism amongst the access to information community when you took this job, because we felt we would have a real champion, not only one of the most well-respected people on Parliament Hill, but also somebody with the skill and the ability to cut through the problems, if the problems existed at that level, and to at least give us some guidance as to what needed to be done. You've done that very capably, admirably, and exceeded our expectations in that regard. Again, we're very sorry that, for whatever your reasons, you're not going to continue in this role.
I'm fond of saying this, but I firmly believe that freedom of information is the oxygen democracy breathes. I've said it before. It should be what guides us. I'm perplexed and even frustrated that the tone around this table is more of a resigned sadness than anger. The public should be furious that we're being systematically denied the right to know what our government is doing with our money. This is a freedom of information issue that should be right down at the coffee shop level of the nation. If they knew, I think they'd be furious.
When you say it has to come directly from the top, I agree. The one thing the Obama regime did, I think in their first day of office, is to say that the default position of their government is going to be openness, not secrecy. It is the culture of secrecy that allowed corruption to flourish for the last many years that I've been here, and in that historical context I thank you for pointing out that it's not just this government that seems obsessed with secrecy.
I got here in 1997, and there were already good people demanding a revision of the Access to Information Act. People like John Bryden dedicated much of their career...so frustrated they formed an informal parallel committee to study and to develop.... Vic Toews and Reg Alcock were on that committee, senior people, two former presidents of the Treasury Board, who helped craft a really robust revamp of the freedom of information act. I can tell you a former Minister of Justice apologized to me personally, saying he underestimated the push-back. He thought he could fulfill his promises to me personally and to this committee that he would be the one to substantially change it, but he underestimated the push-back from the senior bureaucrats and the powers that be.
As the former Information Commissioner, you can speak freely now. At what level do you think the logjam exists? If senior politicians, ministers, have been, and I think some still are, willing to change, where is the advice coming from that leads this justice minister to say no? In spite of their 2006 Conservative Party platform, which I have here, we get this letter saying, no, they've considered it, and they've decided it needs more study. Can you shed any light on what level the barriers to reform exist?