The motion reads as follows:
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.
That is the motion. It's about transparency. It's about seeing whether the Prime Minister's so-called ethics screen is, in fact, working.
The Prime Minister met with top global investment leaders in New York and London. They were secret meetings. When he was asked who he met with, he refused to say. This motion was put on notice; subsequent to that, the Prime Minister disclosed the names of the individuals he met with. That limited disclosure, frankly, raises more questions than it provides answers, because among the representatives of the companies he met with are those who have ties to none other than Brookfield.
The Prime Minister's ethics screen covers Brookfield because of the very real conflicts of interest he has arising from the time he was CEO of Brookfield Asset Management, but we have the Prime Minister meeting in secret, in New York and London, with global investment leaders with ties to Brookfield.
I would cite, for example—