Chair, with the last five minutes I have a motion I'd like to move.
That, pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(h) and in light of recent media reports, the committee undertake a study into Minister Randy Boissonnault’s alleged contravention of ethics and lobbying laws forthwith; that the committee invite Minister Randy Boissonnault and Kirsten Poon to testify individually in addition to any other relevant witnesses; and that the committee report its findings to the House.
Chair, this has been circulated to all members of the committee in both official languages. I'll speak to it briefly, knowing that we have limited time.
We have a mandate at this committee to review matters of this nature, and this is just the latest in a series of unethical dealings by the Trudeau government. It's bombshell news that broke in Global News. This is a Trudeau government minister involved in lobbying the government. There is potential illegality with respect to the Lobbying Act and, of course, questions of the Conflict of Interest Act and the conflict of interest code for members.
Minister Boissonnault lost his seat in the 2019 election, and he restarted his company, Xennex, to lobby the Trudeau government, for which he was previously an MP. The minister tried to shield this from the public by hiding behind his business partner and lobbyist. Their only client was the Edmonton International Airport. They received $25 million in pandemic recovery funds in 2021, one month before he was named the Liberal candidate and just two months before the federal election.
Meetings took place in 2021 and 2022 that helped bring in $110 million in federal grants to the Edmonton International Airport. It was revealed that the minister and his lobbyist business partner still have ties. In fact, Mr. Randy Boissonnault withheld the name of the business that he was receiving payments from, and he failed to disclose the name of Navis Group, which was rebranded from his company. It's a bit of a sleight of hand here, Chair—the trading name versus the corporate name. Someone would have to do a corporate records search to determine that this deception was happening.
This company that he's receiving payments from is simultaneously lobbying the government, including the finance department, for whom he was the associate finance minister. They got direct access to the finance minister and Deputy Prime Minister for a meeting on hydrogen fuel development, and, within months of the meeting, Chair, the minister made an announcement at the Edmonton International Airport, awarding local hydrogen fuel initiatives with $9.74 million in federal funds.
It's troubling. It's unacceptable. Obviously, this wouldn't be the kind of practice that Canadians would accept in private business, but it is a pattern with this Trudeau Liberal government. They're once again caught doing business unethically with taxpayer funds. It's undermining public trust. That's why we need to have hearings on this, Chair, and I look forward to the motion passing swiftly.