Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses for being here.
As the chair has indicated, I am not a permanent member of this committee. Nonetheless, I'm very interested in the conversation we're having today.
I happen to be one of two members sitting at this table who were parliamentarians when the Federal Accountability Act was introduced and when the Lobbying Act came into force in 2008, so I welcome this opportunity. I'm saddened to hear that a statutory review hasn't happened since 2012. I think it's important to be updating these acts as much as possible. Otherwise, you end up having to do a lot of catching up.
I want to comment on something you stated, Mr. Stedman, in the fourth edition of Global Corruption: Its Regulation under International Conventions, US, UK, and Canadian Law and Practice. I believe it was published in 2022. This can be found in chapter 11, “Regulation of Lobbying”. You wrote, “Lobbying regulation is often enacted in the wake of political scandal.” I think that is often when we start to scrutinize the laws we have in place in order to close the loopholes that have perhaps been exploited and to ensure that public confidence in some of the systems and offices we have put in place is not undermined further.
You went on to say, “Public decision-making and confidence in government stand to benefit from policy that is forward-looking and proactive, rather than reactionary.” I think that speaks to the point I just made and, hence, the need for statutory reviews.
You went on to talk about the American approach. I don't know if any questions have been asked around this before. You stated that the American approach sets a much higher standard for disclosure. What would you recommend that needs to be put into our act to try to meet that high standard?