Mr. Chair and members of the committee, I would like to thank you for having invited me to appear before you today.
I am pleased to appear before this committee. I am committed to the principles of the Conflict of Interest Act and the concept of its administration by an independent officer of Parliament. These are important safeguards for the integrity of public office.
Appearing with me today, as the chairman has indicated, is Joe Wild, the assistant secretary to cabinet in the machinery of government secretariat, in the Privy Council. Joe drafted the ethical wall documents that I've provided to the committee.
As many of you know, in March of this year the Right Hoourable Stephen Harper asked me to become his chief of staff, effective January 1, 2011. I accepted without hesitation.
It is a great honour for me to have been invited to serve the Prime Minister as his chief of staff and, through him, to serve our country. I was touched by his confidence in me, and I expect to live up to that confidence each and every day.
Until a few days ago I served as a managing director at Onex Corporation, a company that works to grow and build value in a portfolio of companies it invests in. Onex is a Canadian company and a great Canadian success story. I'm very proud of what we accomplished there. We helped our management teams build leading sustainable businesses and create thousands and thousands of jobs that would not otherwise exist.
Onex is entrusted with billions of dollars of capital from investors and it has a very enviable record over three decades of putting that capital to work to grow businesses, new factories, new products, new processes, and new jobs. My particular area of focus at Onex was aerospace manufacturing, and as a result I served on the board of two of Onex's affiliated companies, Hawker Beechcraft and Spirit. I have since resigned from those positions. As I say, I'm very proud of what we accomplished at Onex and I wish my former colleagues well.
My mandate at Onex has ended, and I will now dedicate 100% of my professional activities to exclusively serving the Prime Minister.
This committee has raised questions about my role at Onex and how it will affect my service to the Prime Minister. My personal experience is that Onex's interactions with government were quite limited. Only once in the past five years have I met with any federal official regarding any Onex business. That was when I accompanied the chief financial officer of Onex to discuss a matter relating to Canada's adoption of the new international financial reporting standards accounting rules with officials from the Bank of Canada. I don't expect issues to arise very frequently, and neither do I expect the ethical wall that we have established to hinder the service and advice that I will render to the Prime Minister.
At your invitation, I have come here to discuss the arrangements I have made on the advice and at the direction of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner and the Privy Council Office. I wanted to appear as a private citizen before I begin employment so that the committee members' questions may be answered before I take up my duties.
I can tell you that at each step of the way, I sought out and followed to the letter the advice of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner and her staff.
I have provided the committee with a number of documents. The first that I will discuss is a letter of agreement between Onex and me reciting the fact that I have taken a leave of absence from that company, and setting out the arrangements regarding any potential return.
The agreement states that if I choose not to return to Onex on or before January 1, 2013—almost two and a quarter years from now—I will be deemed to have voluntarily resigned. As well, the agreement makes an exception to the voluntary resignation principle in the event that Onex terminates me without cause or constructively dismisses me. The purpose of the leave is to avoid the forfeiture of savings and stock options that it took many years for me to earn.
The second set of documents that I will discuss are the ones that together define and provide for the administration of the ethical wall I referred to earlier. These documents have been reviewed and approved by the Ethics Commissioner, who is responsible for administering the act. She has indicated in the e-mail from her office, which I provided to the committee, that her determination of my full compliance with the act, as with any reporting public office holder, will be made upon completion of the confidential report and the publication of any declarations.
The ethical wall was prepared by Joe Wild and Yvan Roy, the deputy secretary to cabinet and counsel to the clerk of the Privy Council. Monsieur Roy is responsible for administering the ethical wall--or conflict screen, as it is sometimes known within government--and as supervisor of the ethical wall will be responsible for ensuring that it is adhered to among political staff in the Prime Minister's Office.
The Office of the Ethics Commissioner will monitor the subject matter of the ethical wall to determine whether changes to that subject matter are required from time to time. Monitoring and considering any changes are also obligations that I personally will have.
The arrangements that I have taken are those of any public office holder, who is subject to the strictest legislation in Canada's history, i.e., the Federal Accountability Act.
When the Conflict of Interest Act was created, Parliament set out five purposes, one of which was to facilitate people who have worked in the private sector to join the public sector, and vice versa. That is a good thing. It is what has allowed people from all walks of life to serve in government, including the highest level of government.
With that in mind, it was back in April that I began working with the Ethics Commissioner and others to ensure that my affairs were arranged in compliance with the act. The very first question I raised with the Office of the Ethics Commissioner was about public office holders on leaves of absence. I was told that the Ethics Commissioner accepts leaves with the proper protections in place and has done so with other individuals.
I then began disclosing my personal financial circumstances to the Ethics Commissioner and familiarizing myself with the Conflict of Interest Act. Her office recommended that a conflict screen or ethical wall be established. With that direction, I met with Monsieur Roy and Mr. Wild of the Privy Council Office and asked them to prepare an ethical wall that would prevent any potential conflicts from arising. That process has been ongoing and was completed this past Friday, when the Ethics Commissioner indicated her approval of the ethical wall documents that you have.
The maintenance and monitoring of the ethical wall will be an ongoing process involving the PCO, the supervisor of the wall, and the Office of the Ethics Commissioner. It will also require me to update those three offices should any information come to my attention requiring a change to the scope.
I have fully disclosed to the Ethics Commissioner my personal financial circumstances and I will be repeating that in a formal confidential report that the statute requires. The Ethics Commissioner's office will be posting my declaration online for everyone to see.
The ethical wall covers three areas that have been determined by the Ethics Commissioner with my agreement. As of now, the Ethics Commissioner has determined that these three areas, and no others, are areas of actual or potential conflicts. I have voluntarily added a fourth area, the Canadian aerospace manufacturing industry. Because my previous involvement in aerospace manufacturing was extensive, I decided it would be prudent to make the aerospace manufacturing industry in Canada part of the wall. I was not required to do so, but I have considered it prudent to do so.
In 2006 Parliament enacted a law administered by the Ethics Commissioner explicitly to provide for the avoidance of conflicts of interest for individuals intending to come from other walks of life into the Government of Canada. It established a complete and comprehensive system based on public and confidential disclosures, and it is working well.
I have full confidence in the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner and her ability, as an independent officer of Parliament, to ensure compliance with the act and that myself, just like all other public office holders, place the interests of Canadians before all others. That is the level of accountability that Parliament sought by adopting the Federal Accountability Act, and that Canadians are entitled to expect.
That is how I conducted myself, and there is nothing in my past to suggest that I will do things any differently. That is a public commitment I am willing to make.
I would like to thank you for having invited me and I would be pleased to answer any questions you might have.