Thank you, Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses.
I'm looking back through some quotes: “After all, a country's access to information system is at the heart of open government”, said the now Prime Minister when debating his own Bill C-613. I think one of his favourite quotes became “Sunlight is the best disinfectant.” He said, “transparent government is good government” during the election campaign.
We had the two relevant ministers in front of us just recently. We seem to have a great divergence of views from the Information Commissioner. I'm not sure I've seen a watchdog condemn a piece of legislation quite so vociferously before.
I'm quoting from her report:
The government promised the bill would ensure the Act applies to the Prime Minister's and Ministers' Offices appropriately. It does not. The government promised the bill would apply appropriately to administrative institutions that support Parliament and the courts. It does not. The government promised the bill would empower the Information Commissioner to order the release of government information. It does not.
Let's just drill into something specific. What's the concern you have about trying to make proactive disclosure equivalent to access to information? We hear the government saying, “Isn't it wonderful? We have proactive disclosure. Why are you people complaining? We're just going to tell you about things. You won't even have to ask. We're going to tell you.”
Mr. McIntosh, from the media, from the point of view of the press holding government to account, what's the problem with government getting proactive in its disclosure?