Thank you to all the witnesses for sharing their perspectives. It is appreciated.
I want to read into the record some comments that the outgoing ethics commissioner made in a bombshell of an interview. Then I'm going to ask the different witnesses for commentary on how, from their perspective, this impacts the code.
I'm just going to read some of these comments. This is from the interview with ethics commissioner Mario Dion. It says:
The government needs to take ethics “more seriously” and that repeated breaches by senior Liberals during his tenure have undermined public confidence in the government....
“The act has been there for 17 years for God's sake, so maybe the time has come to do something different so that we don't keep repeating the same errors.”...
“These are not new rules. You can't make these mistakes, you make everyone look bad, and you make public trust decline by making these mistakes”...
He said he had 140 presentations during his tenure, and thousands of attendees. He said, “that [this] did not prevent International Trade Minister Mary Ng”—who testified in this committee recently—“from telling a House committee”—that's us—“that it would be helpful if the commissioner's office offered 'additional' ethics training to political staff after no one in her office raised a flag when she [doled] out two [thousand dollars] to a...'close friend'.”
He says—and this isn't very complimentary:
“That's like if I drive in my car this afternoon and I drive through a red light and then [argue] with a (police) officer that it is too bad because I should have received training about red lights. It's a convenient excuse, in my view,” he said....
Quoting recent polls showing the public's confidence in politicians is “not going in the right direction,” Dion said in the interview that the ethics breaches by senior Liberals over his tenure were certainly a factor and that “something has to be done” [so that they] show that they “are taking this seriously.”
He says—and this applies also to the code:
“Public shaming is the foundation of the system.”...
The public is understandably frustrated at what appears to be a lack of accountability from law-breaking MPs.
“No one's resigning, no one's forced to resign and no one is [even] shuffled. And there's no appearance of even any sort of accountability, beyond having to stand in front of that question period and say a quick mea culpa, [my fault]”.
He continues:
“It's really dissatisfying that these regimes work that way, and the solution has to lie with [a] culture of accountability within parliamentary democracies.”
I'm coming to the end of his comments