I think what we've seen here is that we had a member who brought forward a bill who had two concerns. He had his concerns about the CBC, and he had concerns about ensuring there was some equilibrium of balance of information. He felt if he was asking the CBC for this he would, on the other hand, expect some measure of transparency within the federal departments, which at this point in many key areas does not exist.
We certainly had problems with the bill, but in good faith we actually asked Mr. Rathgeber to come back a second time. We wanted to give him the full opportunity to discuss this bill.
We felt that in terms of the CBC issue...and he spoke to us about trying to find the language. He was very clear about trying to find the language, in terms of ensuring there was no inordinate undermining of the work of journalists. That was the issue. It wasn't the corporation itself, but it was the work of journalists.
We had hoped that our Conservative colleagues would work with this, but in fact what they presented us was of such narrow scope that they're actually leaving the journalist teams at an extreme disadvantage, which their colleagues in other news agencies do not face, because other journalists are not under access to information. Only the CBC, as a government institution, is. So what we've been offered here is that the name of the source will be protected, but that's not sufficient. We heard that from independent journalists. It is incumbent upon us, as parliamentarians, to ensure the work of journalists in this country is not undermined in any way. This bill does not do that.
On the second element of the bill, in which it was my colleague's desire to actually shed some light so that citizens and taxpayers had a sense of accountability of what was happening in the federal departments, it was not an attack on the departments and not an attack on the civil service, but a sense of where are the upper salaries? What's happening? This was so that people could at some point, if they felt there was perhaps a problem with a decision made in a certain department, or that within a department decisions had been made and yet somebody was getting bonuses and somebody's salary.... That is something that should be part of the public record. He was not suggesting the sunshine list but the right of access to information.
It's one thing my colleague and the New Democrats certainly are concerned about, that Canada is now falling further and further behind. We have countries that were previously dictatorships that have better access to information laws for their citizens than this country. Canada was the world leader; we are now one of the world's laggards. What people see when they see Canada is a country where basic rights to information are getting harder and harder to get. When they're protecting the salaries of everybody under $444,000 a year, they put such a blanket over the work of the federal civil service that no accountability is possible through this bill.
What I've seen is that the Conservative Party has come together to actually put the old horse's head in the bed of one of their own members, who's trying to basically come forward in his way and in his right as a member of the House of Commons to bring forward legislation that can be acted upon. The party has decided to leave him high and dry. I think that's wrong. I would rather have this bill not go back. I'd rather have it stopped because of what's happened here, than to support it going forward.