Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Recently, our jet-setting Prime Minister, in his trips to New York City and London, England, met with several prominent business as well as investment leaders. When he was asked on the weekend who he met with, the Prime Minister refused to say. He refused to be transparent. He merely said he met with investment-type investors and “people who have global capital”. Then he said we'll need “significant capital” in respect of certain unnamed and unspecified projects.
We know that there's never been a Prime Minister with more potential conflicts of interest than this Prime Minister. We have never had a Prime Minister with an ethics screen as vast as the one that is imposed on this Prime Minister in light of the multitude of potential conflicts of interest. We know that this so-called ethics screen has no mechanisms to ensure that there are checks and balances to see that it is being triggered when it ought to be. Instead, we are left to simply trust the Prime Minister's chief of staff and the Clerk of the Privy Council, who serve at the pleasure of the Prime Minister, answer to the Prime Minister and are therefore not independent. It simply isn't good enough to simply say that we're going to trust them.
Frankly, we don't know whether the ethics screen should have been triggered. We don't know what was discussed or whether the Prime Minister stands to personally benefit in any way from any discussions or any decisions that might be in the process of being made, arising from the discussions he had in London and New York. We know that despite the fact that the Prime Minister is subject to this ethics screen, he may make decisions that he stands to personally benefit from. At the very least, that's unacceptable. There needs to be, in the face of that, at the very least some level of transparency. Canadians deserve to know who the Prime Minister was meeting with and why he was meeting with them. They need to have the assurance that this very flimsy ethics screen is, at the very least, being triggered when it ought to be. The Prime Minister has provided no answers to any of those questions.
With that, I would put on notice the following motion:
That, having regard for the fact that the Prime Minister met with several “business as well as investment leaders” in his recent trips to New York City, New York, and London, England, and the Prime Minister has refused to disclose which individuals and/or entities he met with during those trips, and is subject, pursuant to the Conflict of Interest Act, to an ethics screen intended to prevent him from making decisions related to 103 companies that would place him in a conflict of interest, the committee order, from the Prime Minister’s Office, the production of records which comprehensively list each individual, and, if applicable, the name of which entity, corporation, organization, and/or agency they represented and their job title, that was present in a meeting with the Prime Minister, the time and date at which those meetings took place, and what was discussed in those meetings, from and including September 21, 2025, to and including September 28, 2025, and that these records be deposited with the clerk of the committee in both official languages no later than one week following the adoption of this motion.