Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
The last time we chatted, we were about to go to AIPAC in Washington in March, and the whole world changed. You probably made a very wise decision in deciding to stay home at the time. You were probably a couple of weeks ahead of everybody else, and I congratulate you for that.
I congratulate you on being chair of this committee. You're always a very dignified and a very fair member. I appreciate your chairing this committee and I appreciate the opportunity to intervene and be part of this committee in this important discussion.
I was also very moved by what Ms. Gaudreau said. I do believe that partisan behaviour is not needed at a committee meeting and that it's very important to steer clear of it.
For the same reason, I would like to present arguments as to why this proposal is highly partisan and why it should be amended before the committee votes on it.
At the end of the day, this proposal is not going to reach consensus. We're going to be here all evening, tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, because some committee members, particularly Liberal members, feel that this motion is very unfair. I hope that everyone will listen as I explain why I think it's unfair. I hope that I can get everyone on board.
As I'm getting to that, I'm going to switch back to English for a moment. This morning, I had the pleasure of being on a discussion with Elizabeth May and Garnett Genuis to talk about faith in politics and how we need to get away from partisanship. I'm hoping—also in English—that my colleagues will listen to some of the arguments that I present, including you, Mr. Chair, in terms of the receivability of this motion and looking at the way the motion is drafted. I think there are some serious flaws with respect to the motion.
Let me start by going to the Conflict of Interest Act.
I'm going to read one section, because I think it's really relevant. In the Conflict of Interest Act, “reporting public office holder” is the term that covers the people who are covered by this act. It means a public officer holder who is:
(a) a minister of the Crown, minister of state or parliamentary secretary;
(a.1) the Chief Electoral Officer;
(b) a member of ministerial staff who works on average 15 hours or more a week;
(c) a ministerial adviser;
(d) a Governor in Council appointee, or a ministerial appointee whose appointment is approved by the Governor in Council, who exercises his or her official duties and functions on a part-time basis but receives an annual salary and benefits;
(e) a Governor in Council appointee, or a ministerial appointee whose appointment is approved by the Governor in Council, who exercises his or her official duties and functions on a full-time basis;
(e.1) the Parliamentary Budget Officer; or
(f) a person or a member of a class of persons if the person or class of persons is designated under subsection 62.1(2) or 62.2(2).
Let me explain.
The motion before us requires that documents be produced going back as far as October 14, 2008, for Justin Trudeau, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, Margaret Trudeau and Alexandre Trudeau. The Prime Minister of Canada has only been subject to this section of the act since his election as Prime Minister in October 2015. From 2008 to 2015, he was not Prime Minister. From 2008 to 2012, he was a member of Parliament, and from 2012 to 2015, he was leader of the third party in the House. For seven of the 12 years for which documents about his family are requested, he was not subject to this legislation.
If I were committee chair, I would consider this motion to be out of order, as it requires someone to produce documents when they were not subject to the legislation at the time.
I don't even need to get into the question of his family members during that time, because the principal individual wasn't covered by the act for seven of the 12 years for which documents are being requested. I don't think that's right.
I believe in parliamentary committees. I do. I'm one of those people in my party who is always talking about the importance of committees and the powers of committees. I do believe that the committee has a wide power to compel the production of documents, to seek government testimony and to hold the government accountable. I do believe that.
However, I don't believe, where the motion strays well beyond where the act requires the Prime Minister to disclose information for himself and his family, that it's fair to go back. Otherwise, as Mr. Sorbara has said, we could be asking for literally anybody who is not covered under the act to produce documents for themselves and their families. I don't think that's fair, and I'd hope my colleagues would take that under advisement and into consideration when they're considering why I cannot support this motion.
There's a second question. I don't believe that it's always unacceptable.... Here, I'm going to diverge from my colleagues on the Liberal side. I don't believe it's always unacceptable to refuse...or that a committee can never ask for information about someone's relatives. I think there may be times when it is reasonable for a committee to make such a request. With respect to the WE Charity, there may well be justification for requesting information about Alexandre Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, because we know already, from public information, that they have spoken for and been paid by this charity and affiliated organizations.
Mr. Chair, I want to know the following. If the goal here is to look for information on WE and its affiliated organizations, why isn't the name of the organization included in the motion?
I'll read the motion:
That, pursuant to Standing Order 108(1)(a), an order of the Committee do issue to Speakers' Spotlight for a copy of all records pertaining ...
I want to point out the words “all records pertaining.” This isn't about records pertaining to WE and its affiliated organizations.
... to speaking appearances arranged, since October 14, 2008, ...
I already explained why the date of October 14, 2008, was an issue. The Prime Minister wasn't subject to the Conflict of Interest Act between 2008 and 2015.
... for Justin Trudeau, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, Margaret Trudeau and Alexandre Trudeau— including, in respect of each speaking appearance, ...
I want to point out that the motion says “each speaking appearance” here, without referring to the appearances pertaining to WE.
... an indication of the fee provided, any expenses that were reimbursed and the name of the company, organization, person or entity booking it— ...
Clearly, the goal here isn't to look for information regarding Alexandre Trudeau and Margaret Trudeau in relation to WE. The goal is for someone to find something pertaining to speaking appearances made by Margaret Trudeau, Alexandre Trudeau, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau and Justin Trudeau for one organization or another between 2008 and 2015. In my opinion, there's not enough evidence for a committee to conduct an investigation, search for documents, and require the production of documents other than WE documents.
I believe that I've already outlined two major issues with this motion.
First, we're talking about years during which the Prime Minister wasn't subject to the Conflict of Interest Act.
Furthermore, the member who spoke just before me—I won't name him, since he thinks that 25¢ is received each time his name is said—argued that the rationale for this motion is to prove that some of the other information disclosed during the WE investigation isn't accurate. If that were the case, the motion would have stated that only documents pertaining to WE and its affiliated organizations must be produced. However, this isn't the case, and we should really wonder why. This is the second issue.
I'll also explain a third issue with this motion.
Again, Mr. Chair, because I have the document in front of me in English, I'll switch back to English in order to read it.
There is indeed, in the act before us, the Conflict of Interest Act, a distinction made between family members. I'm going to read what family members are:
The following are the members of a public office holder’s family for the purposes of this Act: (a) his or her spouse or common-law partner; and (b) his or her dependent children and the dependent children of his or her spouse or common-law partner.
That does not mean that there is not another section or other sections in the act that do not deal with the wider circle of relatives. Relatives can indeed include the mother and the brother of the public officer holder, but when we come to relevant provisions of this act that deal with the ability to, for example, speak to another organization and not disclose what it is you are paid or who you are speaking to, those provisions are only dealing with the immediate family members, which are the spouse and the dependent children. They don't deal with the brother and the mother.
I'll refer you to section 11 of the act, which states:
No public office holder or member of his or her family
—and the act defines the members of his or her family as the spouse and the dependent children or the common-law partner—
shall accept any gift or other advantage, including from a trust, that might reasonably be seen to have been given to influence the public office holder in the exercise of an official power, duty or function.
Then there are exceptions.
Therefore, this entire issue is that certain opposition parties, and not others, have made this claim that I think is a stretch, that the amounts paid to Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, and certainly to Alexandre and Margaret Trudeau, somehow are a means of influencing the Prime Minister and therefore currying favour of the WE Charity to make us, the government, give a contract to the WE Charity and is thus improper.
However, the relevant section of the act on gifts and other advantages refers only to family members. It does not refer to relatives, which is the wider section that would have been referred to would it have been intended to have this committee run off and ask for the production of Alexandre Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau's speaking fees. That's another mystery, and I again point to that in this act, it's very simple, there are multiple sections where you refer to the mother or brother of the public office holder.
For example, with regard to a government department, the act states:
No public office holder, other than a minister of the Crown, minister of state or parliamentary secretary, who otherwise has the authority shall permit the public sector entity for which he or she is responsible, or to which he or she is assigned, to enter into a contract or employment relationship with his or her spouse, common-law partner, child, sibling or parent except in accordance with an impartial administrative process in which the public office holder plays no part.
That is clear. In that section, you're talking about the whole family that is mentioned, but again, going back to the section on gifts and other advantages, I'll repeat section 11(1):
No public office holder or member of his or her family shall accept any gift or other advantage, including from a trust, that might reasonably be seen to have been given to influence the public office holder in the exercise of an official power, duty or function.
Then you go back again to the definition of “Family members”, and in this act, the following are the members of a public officer holder's family for the purposes of this act: his or her spouse or common-law partner; and his or her dependent children and the dependent children of his or her spouse or common-law partner, which makes it seem to me that when the Parliament passed this act it deliberately, in its wisdom, after going through committees and going through Parliament, decided not to include the mother and the brother in that relevant section of the act.
Now I think I've presented you three flaws in this motion. One, the deeds go beyond the deeds that the Prime Minister was even covered by the act. Two, the fact is we're not referring specifically to the WE Charity, so that goes against the raison d'être of the motion previously advanced by the mover of the motion. Number three, the relevant section of this act doesn't cover the mother or the brother.
I believe I have made that case cogently, Mr. Chair. As a result, these reasons I believe that this motion is out of order because it goes beyond the powers of the committee and strays from the Conflict of Interest Act.
But Mr. Chair, let me also go to another question that I think is quite relevant.
We're all now talking about going after the current Prime Minister and his spouse and his mother and his brother and not tied to the WE Charity. If this motion had been tied to WE, I could have understood it better, but it's not.
It is not unusual in Canada, Mr. Chair, for prime ministers and members of their family to start going on speakers' tours after they leave office or before they are in office. For example, Mr. Chair, let me mention that the Right Honourable Stephen Harper is a client of Worldwide Speakers Group. Stephen Harper, on the Worldwide Speakers Group website, says that he is willing to travel from Canada to anywhere in the world for an arranged fee, that you need to inquire for details, and it says that “The Right Honourable Stephen Harper led Canada through the world's most complex geopolitical, economic and security challenges as the country's 22nd Prime Minister. During his tenure in the world's top forums such as the G-7 and G-20, NATO and the United Nations, Prime Minister Harper was known for a frank, assertive leadership style defined by principled diplomacy, disciplined economic policy, a strong stance on international peace and security, and passionate defence of freedom and human dignity.”
Mr. Chair, I was able with your permission to extol former Prime Minister Harper in his own words of how he likes to be sold as a speaker, and I have a whole lot of respect for him. But Mr. Chair, what would stop me from proposing an amendment to this motion, because it's not tied to WE in any way, would be if we were to ask for all the information related to former Prime Minister Stephen Harper or Laureen Harper, who also has been booked as a speaker, or Rona Ambrose also booked by Speakers' Spotlight?
Another example would be Caroline Mulroney who, as a minister in the province of Ontario, had the opposition ask for a committee to subpoena for all of the speaking engagements of former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, who I as a Montrealer have great respect for. He is a client of the Washington Speakers Bureau, and the Washington Speakers Bureau says this about him: “Charming, humorous, insightful, informative and a distinguished world leader, Brian Mulroney is the architect of international commerce who transformed Canada into an economic and political influence in the world.”
While I guess Lester Pearson and Pierre Elliott Trudeau and others might dispute that only Brian Mulroney transformed Canada into having political influence on the world, again, I applaud former Prime Minister Mulroney. I think he has done great things since leaving office, and I think he's a very fine man, and his wife is a very fine woman, and his family, Mark and Caroline and Nick and Benedict. I like all of them, but that does not mean that Caroline and her brother Ben should have to produce his records of what he's earning when he's on CTV. It doesn't mean that her father should have to produce records either.
All I would need to do is to move to amend this motion one after the other all night long in adding the names of former Conservative politicians who accept money from speakers' bureaus. I am prepared to have a debate on each one, but that is why I believe this motion has strayed far away from something that's collegial, where we are looking for information on WE, where I may have been more sympathetic to looking for what my colleague, Mr. Sorbara, called a “fishing expedition”. I'm not going to call it that. I'm just saying it's wrong.
When I explain to my colleagues and my counterparts why I think this is unfair, I hope that they'll listen to me and look at this issue in their role as a member of Parliament, regardless of their party. I hope that they'll consider the consequences of a motion to require the production of documents pertaining to the family members of a person who wasn't even subject to the legislation in question at the time set out in the request. That's the first thing.
Second, the goal of the motion is to require the production of documents when the individuals involved aren't subject to the section of the legislation that underpins the motion.
Third, they're referring to the legislation and saying that all this is related to WE. However, the motion fails to include the name of the organization or its affiliated organizations.
Fourth, are we really headed down a path where we'll require anyone to provide all their documents to the committee? Let's say I'm a speaker and I've been paid by various groups for my services. If I've also been a member of Parliament or I will be one in the future, or if someone in my family is a member of Parliament, will I be required to produce my documents? I think that this goes too far.
I hope that we can find an offline solution. It would be more useful to end this meeting and take another opportunity to discuss the issue among ourselves and find a solution, so that we don't have to stay here all evening.
In the hope of that happening, Mr. Chair, I move that this meeting do adjourn.