Mr. Russell, a question for you.
I will read a headline from today's Toronto Star.
YESTERDAY: How regulators have failed to crack down on stock market miscreants
--their term, not mine--
while developing an international reputation for inaction and ineffectiveness.
TODAY: How a big-budget police squad set up to take on corporate crime degenerated into a bureaucratic mess with few results.
That bureaucratic mess is IMET, the integrated market enforcement team. It is exactly as the Toronto Star describes it today, and we've been saying it for some time. It doesn't work--centralized, single, Ottawa- based, and incompetent.
What is it that makes you believe that bringing the regulation of markets to Ottawa would somehow make it work? Let's look at some facts. In Quebec there's the rather famous Vincent Lacroix case. He's in the slammer right now doing 8 to 12 years, so he's in appeal on the length of his sentence. He's been convicted on dozens of regulatory cases in Quebec under the provincial statutes. He faces several thousand criminal charges under the Criminal Code of Canada. Not the first day of the first trial on the first charge has ever been held under those criminal charges, and the only reason he's in jail is because Quebec's Autorité des marchés financiers does a very good job of enforcing its rules.
I find when I meet groups that just affirm that it would be better if we just brought everything together in Ottawa, like IMET.... I'm not the one who is saying they're incompetent, the Toronto Star is, but I happen to agree with them, because they don't get results. What is it, other than your sentiment, your feeling, and I dare say your prejudice, that says that somehow Ottawa is good at this and it would be really great if we threw more bureaucrats at it, rather than the people who are actually fighting a little bit, like Mr. Bethlenfalvy's team? If you don't do a good job of regulating your market, people won't come to you. So Quebec is doing something not only for individual investors and for the corporations involved, it's also doing something for itself, because people will come to a place that is well structured and well regulated.
I'm trying to get into your head and figure out, other than what I detect as being just a pro-Ottawa prejudice, a centralizing tendency, what makes you believe factually that they can actually do the job better.