Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Yes, I would like to move that motion and take a bit of time to motivate it.
The way that this came up is there was an access to information request made by a Canadian Press reporter that was recently denied by the government. Some documents were released, but substantial portions of them were left out and not disclosed. The government chose to exercise a discretionary exemption to leave out some of the advice and deliberations from that document.
I think it would be useful for the committee to have a sense of the kind of advice that's being offered to the President of the Treasury Board and to government on how to go forward. I think it would be useful to us because it would help inform the study that we're doing on the Access to Information Act, to get a sense of the kinds of recommendations that are being made to government, and the basis on which those recommendations are being made. I think that would be important for our committee to consider.
I could imagine a government that wasn't committed to openness and transparency maybe not wanting to see such a motion go through, and they might argue, for instance, that.... Frankly, I find it hard to see why this information wouldn't be useful to the committee.
You might argue that the scope of this particular motion is too broad. I would of course be willing to entertain friendly amendments to appropriately narrow that scope if the feeling of the committee is that this scope is too broad. Perhaps we want to try to narrow it down to those particular documents that were the subject of the access request and ensure that members of the committee, and more than members of the committee, members of the public are able to have access to the advice and deliberations on how government might proceed with reforms to the Access to Information Act, and are heard.
I think it was a mistake on the part of the government to deny this particular request and not make that advice and those deliberations open to the public. I think particularly with respect to this piece of legislation it's incumbent on government. I hear a sincere desire from the government to open up a new culture of openness and transparency. What better way to start than by making the discussions around reform to this act as open and as transparent as possible?
It's in the spirit of making the committee's work more useful to government, assisting government, and getting off on the right foot in terms of a culture of openness and transparency, that I move this motion. I hope we can pass it today so that this information might inform our discussion as soon as possible.
Thank you.