I realize the member is trying to reach some sort of consensus, but I would encourage him to check with his caucus before proposing something like that.
I'd like to follow up on Mr. Barrett's argument. He clearly stated that this wasn't covered under the Conflict of Interest Act. The committee may wish to examine this issue, but I encourage my fellow members to think about who would want to run for election when they have to disclose not only their information, but also that of their parents. I don't have anything to hide either. My father is retired. My brother works in construction and doesn't have any government contracts. I have absolutely nothing to hide.
Mr. Barrett's motion would require that a person's mother, brother and all sorts of other people who aren't subject to the Conflict of Interest Act disclose their information. Mr. Chair, I'm wondering why you didn't rule it out of order for that reason.
What I'm trying to say is that, in principle, it's not the job of politicians to determine whether something corrupt occurred. It's up to police, and here's the proof. When the WE issue made headlines in early July, Mr. Barrett, the member for Carleton and even the member for Regina—Qu'Appelle called for an investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and so forth. We are still waiting for the results of that investigation to find out whether anyone will be going to jail because of this situation or whether it was nothing more than stories made up by Mr. Barrett and the member for Carleton, yet again.
Mr. Chair, as members, we have a responsibility to decide on a process and follow it. The Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner is in the midst of looking into the matter, and it is our responsibility, as parliamentarians, to have full confidence in him.
I know that, come Sunday, Mr. Barrett and the member for Carleton will probably demand another kind of anticorruption investigation and who knows what else. It'll make the news, which will please them and make them feel validated. That's fine and dandy, but at the end of the day, the Liberal members in the House take the matter seriously. With the members of the opposition continuing to demand some sort of investigation into another investigation regarding a different investigation, at some point, we have to take our jobs as parliamentarians seriously. We have work to do.
People want to know what we're doing in response to COVID-19 to support them and make sure businesses come through the pandemic.
When it comes to information about this person's or that person's family, there's a long-standing tradition in politics: you can go after a politician, but you can't go after their family. I call this doing things à la Deborah Grey.
Well, the hypocrisy, Mr. Chair, is that Deborah Grey later signed on. As much as she spoke against that MP pension, she signed on to it. She is now collecting an MP's pension.
I feel the hypocrisy from the opposition. I have to mention Deborah Grey. Deborah Grey, in the 1990s, was the parliamentarian who was saying about MPs' pensions, “How dare you grab an MP's pension? How dare you MPs, Liberal MPs and Conservative MPs?” I remind everybody that the Canadian Alliance, the Reform Party and the PC Party were all divorced. They were all separated, and how ashamed that Deborah Grey was saying, “How dare you grab your MP's pension?”