Thank you.
The motion speaks to the matter before the House, Mr. Chair, and I'm arguing against the motion. As a member of Parliament with parliamentary privileges, I have the right to make the arguments I think most germane to the motion, and I will.
The government fully recognizes the authority of parliamentary committees to call persons and papers as they carry out their work. However, ministers are accountable and answerable to Parliament for government policies, decisions, and operations. Ministerial staff are ultimately accountable through their minister.
Ministers have run for office and accepted the roles and the responsibilities of being a minister, including being accountable to and answering questions in Parliament. Again, ministerial staff are ultimately accountable through the minister they serve. When they accepted their positions to support their ministers, ministerial staff did not sign on to being humiliated and intimidated by members of Parliament.
Ministers' staff who have appeared before committees have been denied the accompanying support of their ministers. They have been denied the opportunity to get basic treatment of due process. They have been stripped of the ancient tradition that guarantees ministers are responsible for the function of their ministries and their departments.
We have a minister here today. He's agreed to answer questions. He has graciously answered all the questions to which he's been permitted to respond. The committee should respect the centuries-old tradition that the minister is responsible and let him answer those questions.
Ms. Freeman wants to move a motion that removes those centuries of parliamentary tradition and replace it with an ad hoc system that singles out staff members in areas of ministerial responsibility. I think that leadership starts at the top. That's why the heads of the ministries, in this case the ministers, are appearing before this committee.
As you know, the witness the committee asked for was a member of the Prime Minister's Office. Prime Ministers typically do not testify before committees—that matter is not in dispute. Therefore the Prime Minister does send a designate to represent him. In this case we have Minister Baird.
I will point out that at least three of the four parties in this room have referred to Minister Baird as a charming minister. I think we could probably pass a motion to that effect if it were so moved. The very least we can do, out of respect for our system of government, is to give him a chance to respond to the questions before the committee. Perhaps the members would be satisfied and satiated in all their curiosities if they were to allow such a discussion to go ahead.
I don't think we even heard ten minutes of questioning at this point, and opposition members are already asking to shut down this ministerial accountability.
Mr. Chair, I would encourage members to not only allow the discussion to continue, but to also give the minister opportunities to answer questions. I think in the last exchange between Minister Baird and Mr. Easter, Mr. Easter spent about six minutes of his time in a monologue and permitted the minister only about a total of 15 or 20 seconds to speak. That does not appear to the objective observer to be an exchange or even a question and answer. It appears rather to be a speech.