Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to commend everybody's remarks this evening and congratulate them for all the insightful information.
To you, Mr. Chair, I say thank you for the great job you are doing as chair of this committee. We are on multiple hours of speaking to the motion brought forward by MP Barrett. There are a lot of differing views. We all get very passionate about our views and the information we wish to provide, not only to the committee, but to our residents and Canadians watching at home. It's great. You've done a fantastic job, so thank you, Chair, for that and for the guidance you're providing all members of the committee.
To my colleague and friend, committee member Mr. Turnbull, you're doing a great job. It's your first year anniversary. That's awesome, and I wish you much continuing success.
MP Warkentin, you've got to stop attacking me on Twitter, my friend. You're going at me pretty hard there. I thought we were friends and stuff. I'll still consider you a friend, but I had a few people point out that you tend to attack me once in a while, but that's politics, right? We're here for the good of all Canadians. Let's try to keep it on that point. We may not agree on everything, and I don't agree with MP Barrett's motion for many reasons.
One thing that I did, Chair, in my time.... Thank you for acknowledging the passing of the father of a good friend of mine from graduate school. His father passed away over the weekend, and I was able to get to the viewing this evening and express my condolences to my friend, Mauro, whom I've known for 20-some odd years from my days at U of T in graduate school. It was nice to see Mauro tonight, but not under those circumstances. Thank you for acknowledging that.
When I read the motion brought forth by MP Barrett in terms of the speaking experiences, and when I look at everything that's been going on over the last several months in terms of the committee work that was done, which was everything that was released in the media and is widely held and widely available for all of us, I think there are a number of things I want to correct. Maybe this is debate or not, but a number of MPs have thrown around numbers in the last hours. This is a billion dollar number.
Frankly, before the pandemic even started and when our government was putting together a whole hash of programs to support Canadians from coast to coast to coast, the Canada emergency response benefit, the Canada emergency business account, which we've now expanded, the Canada emergency wage subsidy, which we've extended.... When we were looking at a plan to put in place for students specifically and we introduced the Canada student benefit, which would benefit over 700,000 youth, we attempted to put together the Canada student service grant program.
Obviously, the road that path took and the due diligence that was involved from our side and from everyone's side was significant.
Personally, I did not even know that this organization called WE even existed. I had never attended an event. I had never interacted with any representatives from the organization. It was a very new organization for me, personally. I have two kids in the elementary school system here in Ontario, and they had never gone to any events. I just didn't know anything about it. I didn't know what they did or what they didn't do. I was very interested to read and understand what was going on and what you could say was political spin from the opposition. What was reality? Where were mistakes were made on our part? No government is perfect.
The Conservatives know that no government is perfect. They are not perfect. We are not perfect, and I would never profess to be perfect. That is why we constantly learn and try to do better. That is why we try to act with a moral compass that takes us in a direction we believe we're comfortable with and we think is right. When I listened this evening, and in the last few hours to some of the comments with reference to the motion and to documents, first of all, I have to say that there was never a $900 million or a billion dollar program, to my understanding. The opposition can say there was, but there really wasn't.
If you actually go to the organization that was engaged with the government, and went through the process of being engaged with the government, first off, you can read the contribution agreement, which I have here, and you can go through it. You can go through that contribution agreement line by line, and you can understand where we were going with the contribution agreement, who we were trying to help out and what our intent was.
The intent was to help students. We did it through the Canada summer jobs program, which we expanded since we first came into office, and we did it through the Canada emergency student benefit. We've done it through changing the Canada grant programs and boosting them by billions of dollars. We also lowered interest rates for students on their student debt, helping them out in so many ways.
Therefore, when we think about the program in place and how we got to this motion, it's like a trajectory. I'm not going to read the funding agreement, but I am going to reference it.
Going to the WE website, the organization has obviously suffered consequences from everything. I say this to my colleagues—because it has been said tonight in debate, and I know my colleague Gord Johns mentioned it—it was never a billion dollars.
First, the total value of the contribution was $543 million. That is the number. In the contribution—and you can read it—there was no money spent on this program. The program did not in fact then depart; it was not executed. It was not done. The theoretical maximum expense reimbursement to WE was approximately $35 million for the design, delivery, disbursement of grants and third party costs.
The second fallacy was that the WE Charity was chosen to administer the program due to political connections. I looked into this, because of what Ian Shugart, the Clerk of the Privy Council and Secretary to Cabinet, said in his remarks at the Standing Committee on Finance in July. He said that WE was chosen for its track record and that “What WE was able to provide…was the full range of services that would go to the heart of this matching program that would put young people in contact with not-for-profits so they could gain the relevant experience; their ability to promote the program with a massive social media following; experience in other situations of matching young people to service opportunities;…existing database information; representation right across the country with partnerships with other charities.”
That was the Clerk of the Privy Council commenting on this and vouching for it and saying that this is why the program went in this direction. Unfortunately, the program was never implemented. We went with other programs for youth. Those funds were not spent. It's not that we'll put that aside, but I'll speak to that in a second.
Then there's been this spin that the Trudeau families and the former finance minister gained exorbitant benefits from WE Charity. That's why I called it a fishing expedition and an overreach by the opposition party. I fundamentally believe that.
There's actually a public link to the documents that WE disclosed during the summer for the Prime Minister's mother, Margaret Trudeau, his brother, and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau. It's there. I'm going to read it, because it pertains to this motion. It didn't take me too long to get the information. I just did a quick Google search.
The WE website notes:
Incorrect information is circulating regarding members of the Trudeau family earning honorariums, and the amount reimbursed for their associated expenses.
It continues:
Honorariums paid to members of the Trudeau family totalled $217,500 for 35 engagements (with multiple events per engagement) between October 2016 and March 2020. Some media outlets and politicians are incorrectly identifying expenses paid to cover their travel, food, hotels, etc., as fees paid to the speakers themselves. In order to correct the public record please see the full breakdown of all engagement honorariums and expenses related to Margaret Trudeau, Alexandre Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau here:
Now this is the information put out by WE itself:
Margaret Trudeau Between October 2016 and March 2020, a speaking bureau was used to engage Margaret Trudeau 28 times. On each occasion she provided an average of 3-5 events per engagement.
This is all public. Nothing is not in the public realm. I didn't find some magical source for information. The site indicates:
For one engagement, there was no compensation. The amount she received in fees for the 27 engagements totalled $180,000.00 (after 20% commission paid to Speaker’s Spotlight) averaging $6,666.66 per engagement. The total amount of expenses (hospitality costs including food, hotels, car service) was $163,654.74, which captured several international trips to both the United States and United Kingdom, and represents an average of $6,061.29 for each engagement. An additional $160 in gifts was provided to Margaret Trudeau during this time.
It goes on to say the same thing about Alexandre Trudeau:
Between September 2017 and February 2018, a speaking bureau was used to engage Alexandre Trudeau 9 times. On each occasion he provided an average of 3-5 events per engagement. The amount he received in engagement and ancillary event fees for these 9 engagements totalled $36,000.00 (after 20% commission paid to Speaker’s Spotlight), averaging $4,333.33 per engagement. The total amount of expenses (hospitality costs including food, hotels, car service, and flights) covered for Alexandre Trudeau over the 9 engagements he attended was $22,025.42, or an average of $2,447.26 per engagement. An additional $230 in gifts was provided to Alexandre Trudeau during this time.
I think that during this time the mother of the Prime Minister may have been to other events, speaking about mental health, life experiences, and inspiring youth and young women, and that's fine. There's nothing untoward. These individuals have private careers and private lives, and here we are with Mr. Barrett's motion to go on this fishing expedition because he doesn't like...let me rephrase that, because the official opposition doesn't like the information that's out there because they think there's more sauce out there, if I can use that analogy. I think I was quoted about going after someone's mother and brother, who are not elected representatives, who have done nothing wrong, who have been exemplary citizens in my humble eyes, and I think that's completely wrong.
As its last comment on the website, they note the following regarding the Prime Minister's wife:
...Sophie Trudeau attended a total of eight WE Day events. She received a one-time speaking fee of $1,500.00 in 2012. The total amount of expenses (hospitality costs including hotels, car service and flights) covered for Sophie Trudeau over the 8 events she attended was $23,940.76, or an average of $2,992.59 per event. An additional $240 in gifts was provided to Sophie Trudeau during this time.
I read this the other day, and I read the information on the site. I looked at it because we're here because of the motion, and what and who it relates to. Again, this concerns me considerably, to the extent that this is nothing more than going after the Prime Minister's mother and brother and wife. That's all it is, no more, no less. The documents have been disclosed. The tough questions were asked over the summer. The information was provided.
The way I view this is that it's a complete overreach by the opposition. Yes, it's unfortunate that the program did not go forward.
MP Simms is no longer on the call, but I've had the pleasure of working with Scott on the Canada-Europe Parliamentary Association because he chairs it, and I've travelled with him. Scott is an exemplary MP for many reasons, not only because he's very well spoken and quite eloquent—we would all like to rise to that level of eloquence, absolutely. At the same time, he likes to call it the way it is. And he was right. He's says we've done a good job in a lot of programs that we've put in place. Definitely. We've helped Canadians from coast to coast with input from opposition parties, in co-operation with other levels of government, and we got it right.
I would fundamentally say, on all the programs, we got it right, and even on assisting our youth. I know MP Green who was on earlier, and MP Angus, spoke about that. There were programs put in place that assisted youth across this country, from Canada summer jobs, the Canada emergency student benefit, in addition to a number of measures we've taken over a number of years in various budgets, from the first time we formed a majority government in 2015 until now. We need to look at that.
Now, I look at their testimony. MP Johns said, well, it was a billion dollars. No, it wasn't a billion-dollar program, not at all. Was it supposed to help 100,000 young people? Yes, it was. Did we put in place other programs to replace that? Yes, to a certain extent we did, absolutely. Was it unfortunate the program didn't go ahead? Yes, absolutely.
At the same time, we are helping Canadians, and continue to help Canadians.
I do encourage my Conservative members to go to the WE website and find the information I found. You'll get the numbers you need. You'll see the expenses disclosed and the information I found. I think you should be quite satisfied with that and understand the fact that you really are overreaching, and Canadians will understand that fact. You are looking at this from unfortunately a very small prism, as I would call it. I like to use this term. There is a bigger picture. The bigger picture is that we in the middle of a second wave of a pandemic.
I do think it's important that certain segments of the funding agreement between Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada, as represented by the Minister of State of Diversity and Inclusion, and the WE Charity Foundation...because I think it's important to look at intent, the intent of the program, and why that relates to the motion at hand. The motion at hand is nothing more than trying to grab some documents. It's interesting to note that the motion doesn't ask about the intent of the Canada student service grant, the intent of our helping out youth. Who were these youth that we're supposed to be helping out?
I look at the intent in the funding agreement to provide biweekly reports to ESDC on all students registered in service opportunities and all the students who register for the CSSG with the following indicators as available: estimated volunteer service hours completed; number of students per birth year; number of students who identify as first language English or French, male or female or other, LGBTQ2+, visible minority or racialized, and as having a disability, as indigenous, and whether they identify as registered on reserve, off reserve, or as non-status, Métis or Inuit; the number of students who are newcomers to Canada; and the number of students by their highest level of education and completed, elementary, secondary and post-secondary.
When I look at this funding agreement and how it came to fruition, how it was recommended by the amazing public bureaucrats—I don't like using the word “bureaucrat”—but public servants that we have in the Government of Canada, what was the intent of this? The intent of this was to help students.
Now we've gotten to a point where this motion is not talking about anything in the realm of helping Canadians, but about wanting a copy of all records “pertaining to speaking appearances arranged, since October 14, 2008” of the four individuals, “including, in respect of each speaking appearance, an indication of the fee provided, any expenses that were reimbursed and the name of the company, organization, person or entity booking it—which had been originally ordered to be produced on July 22, 2020”.
It amazes me that with all the information out there we're still trying to draw from a rock anything left, because there is nothing left, the information is out there.
To my esteemed and learned colleague—I think that's the word—Mr. Turnbull, for whatever reason, I went and looked at what “ethics” meant and where it derived from and everything to that extent, but I put that aside and said that ethics to me is making sure you try to do the right thing. I think as parliamentarians we always try to do the right thing. I think someone who is in cabinet, or someone who is the prime minister, always tries to do the right thing. Yes, politics is politics. We all understand that, but fundamentally during this pandemic we are all in this together. A number of programs were put in place—and I know, Chair, I apologize if I repeat it—to help Canadians, yes.
This motion, does it aid the process? Does it assist this process in helping Canadians out? Absolutely not. This is nothing more than looking into a barrel and seeing nothing, but putting forward more motions that achieve nothing. Something on the website that I found interesting was about what we were thinking in the summertime and what the organization that had been engaged by the public servants to help our youth out was thinking about even before the actual program came to fruition.
I want to read the executive summary, because I think, independent of organization, this is how Canadians wanted to help, this is what Canadians wanted to do, especially a lot of organizations.
In that regard, I had a number of organizations in my riding convert production lines so they could make sanitizing lotion, PPE. The Premier of Ontario has been to my riding several times.... There are a number of companies that converted to make personal protective equipment: gowns, masks, sanitizer. We are all in this together, and I look at this motion and ask, where's that spirit? It's like we're just going to play politics.
I look at my Twitter feed and I see Mr. Warkentin attacking me, and a number of Conservatives then attacking me. You know what? I'm really sad to see that, because for me, the parents in my riding and the families in my riding, they're not really paying attention to that, but to their kids going to school tomorrow morning and making sure that their hydro bills are paid at the end of the month. They're not paying attention to what Mr. Warkentin's tweeting about this motion and about my testimony.
It's unfortunate, but they're not paying attention, Mr. Warkentin. I hate to tell you that, they're really not.
I look at this motion and I'm like, really? You just go to the WE website and it's all disclosed there. You can get the information. If you want to see each individual receipt, each time a piece of food was eaten, each hotel, or each person who was involved, if that's where you want to go.... I don't know. Are we going to go down that path? Do you want to bring in every single tie..? It just amazes me. Where are we going with this motion?
I just wanted to read this into the record, Chair, if you'll allow me to:
This document outlines an opportunity to launch a national, bilingual turn key digital service program to enable 20,000 young Canadians to engage in summer service placements and projects during the COVID 19 crisis. There is an urgent need to support young people between the ages of 16 and 29, particularly those from under-represented groups, who are seeking meaningful opportunities to develop life skills, earn income for personal use such as paying for post secondary studies, and serving Canada to benefit communities. By incentivizing and supporting youth to engage through a system of well organized service opportunities, they will—
I think Ms. Blaney would like to make a point of order.