Thank you to the committee for the opportunity to address you today on this very important topic with regard to some of the key rules amongst other key rules that protect our democracy and government integrity at the federal level.
I'm representing today a coalition of 27 citizen groups with a total membership of 1.5 million supporters, who all oppose the parts of the commissioner's proposed new code that would change the current code rules in ways that would allow for corrupt favour-trading between lobbyists and politicians.
Democracy Watch has already made three submissions to the committee and three submissions to the commissioner. I will be sending a further submission with details about my testimony today.
My first request is that you need to invite the commissioner back before anything goes forward. One of Democracy Watch's submissions has 10 key questions the committee has to ask the commissioner about the implications of these rules, and when she testified on February 3, only one of the 10 questions was asked. Essentially, that's hiding what's really in there.
I'll address the gifts and hospitality rule briefly because lots of people misunderstand it, including people who have testified today. The Ethics Commissioner has already made it clear with a public statement that MPs cannot accept any gift from anyone trying to influence them, whether they're registered as a lobbyist or not, if the gift or hospitality is worth $30 or more annually. That's the limit. It doesn't matter what the lobbyists' code is changed to say; the Ethics Commissioner has said $30 and that's it.
The average donation made over the last five years to political parties by individual Canadians is $75. There's a reason for an $80 annual limit. Canadians, individual voters, can't afford more than that. It doesn't matter, again, whether you change the code; the Ethics Commissioner is going to say you can't accept gifts worth more than $30.
Small gifts have influence. Tests by clinical psychologists worldwide of tens of thousands of people have shown that if you want to influence someone's decisions, you do them a favour or you give them a gift, and even small gifts have influence. If you deny that as an MP you're simply saying you're not human. These tests have been done in every culture worldwide and they all show the same results: the best way to influence someone is to give them a gift or do them a favour, and even a small gift will cause a sense of obligation to return the favour.
The much more important issue is the cooling off periods in rule 6 and the definition of “other political work” in the appendix of the proposed new code.
The current rule is that if you do any significant political work, including any fundraising, you have to sit out for four years. The commissioner is gutting that rule entirely. The commissioner's proposal is that lobbyists, as long as they don't do it more than nearly full time, or without frequent or expensive interaction with a public official or a party official, should be allowed to raise an unlimited amount of money for the politician or the party at the same time as lobbying them. That's just one of many examples of what the “other political work” definition allows.
It's a huge loophole. It's one of the most corrupt things I've seen a so-called democratic good government watchdog do in the past 30 years. I've seen lots of watchdogs let people off for clear wrongdoing.
This will systemically allow for rampant unethical lobbying, U.S.-style trading of favours that's corrupt, and it will corrupt every policy-making process going forward, as lobbyists use fundraising, campaigning and other favours to buy you off and corrupt your policy- and decision-making. It's a 25-year step backwards, back to 1997, before there was a code. It goes against every OECD standard and every other international standard.
The commissioner has also made the very questionable claim that the current four-year prohibition on lobbying after political activities violates the Charter of Rights' freedom of expression, based on one opinion from one law firm, Goldblatt Partners, which the commissioner, in a sole-sourced contract—which is smelly itself—paid tens of thousands of dollars, as far as we can tell.
Several Supreme Court of Canada and other Canadian court rulings have clearly stated that the charter rights can completely, justifiably, be restricted to protect government integrity. As a result, it is clear that the current four-year cooling-off period complies with the charter entirely.
The committee must order the commissioner to disclose this opinion they've received from Goldblatt Partners. For this to go forward based on a secret ruling from a law firm would be untenable.
The second significant problem with the commissioner's proposed new code is that it does not specify what will happen after a lobbyist works in a political party's election campaign headquarters, or campaigns or fundraises for a political party in-between elections. The new code does not say whom a lobbyist would be prohibited from lobbying. Will the prohibition only apply to the political party leader, or everyone in the party?
Also, the third problem is that gutting the code's rules in ways that allow lobbyists to do favours for cabinet ministers, and MPs and senators will also likely gut the ethics rules for ministers, MPs and senators.
How? All of these ethics rules currently have a blanket rule that says that you can't improperly further another person or entity's interests. It would, of course, be improper for cabinet minister, MP or senator to further the interest of a lobbyist who had raised money for them or done other favours for them, but if the Lobbyists' Code is changed to say that it's proper, then it will no longer be improper for the ministers and MPs to do that.