Mr. Chair, Mr. Maloney and Mr. Blanchard can say all they want that the Prime Minister has satisfied these threshold standards set by the Ethics Commissioner, but I would refer to the testimony from yesterday when Mr. Sabia, the Clerk of the Privy Council, was asked whether he would say to Mr. Carney that he can no longer speak with Brookfield. The answer from Mr. Sabia was that it wouldn't be necessary for him to do so, and that, in discussing things with the Ethics Commissioner a few months ago, the commissioner told him to do just that. In other words, don't talk to Brookfield. What did the Prime Minister do instead? He met with Sam Pollock, the CEO of Brookfield Infrastructure in Washington. He was lobbied by a company that is owned by Brookfield, and he had a private breakfast working meeting with four Brookfield investors in London. That's hardly following the guidance of the Ethics Commissioner.
I want to pick up on a line of questioning by Mr. Majumdar about who is screening who.
In that regard, do you screen Mr. Carney's texts?
