Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
You'll forgive me, I hope, if I feel some nostalgia for the days when the previous Liberal government used to be criticized for having surpluses that were larger than forecast, for not meeting its target. The Conservatives would be harshly critical of that. It's a remarkable thing now, and I look back fondly to the time when we were in fact, according to them, paying the debt down too quickly.
Wouldn't that be attractive now, when we have a record deficit and the debt's going in the wrong direction?Hopefully, it will eventually come down. The difficulty is, how do we assess that?
Mr. Page, I want to reiterate what you said in your opening remarks, that “this Government provided Parliament details on spending restraint by department and agency in 2006”. You're saying that the kind of information that this government, the Conservative government, was actually willing to give freely—at least in its first year in office in 2006—and which you received from the previous governments, you're saying in 2005.... They are now saying that it's a cabinet confidence. To me, that's a ridiculous statement; it's the same kind of information, but now they don't like the information. They don't like what it says, so they don't want to give it out. That's disturbing.
I hope that during their comments in the rest of this meeting the Conservatives will take the opportunity to...I hope my colleagues will explain why they're not horrified, embarrassed, and outraged at the cabinet's decision in this regard and how it makes them look. I mean, they must ask themselves.... How can they consider themselves even small-c conservatives when the government's deficit is so large, when it won't disclose the kind of information that would allow Parliament to assess how it's doing, and how it can possibly achieve what it claims it can? That's a very disturbing question.
Now, Mr. Page, since your last visit here, you've indicated that you did get some information from ten of the government's largest departments and agencies, and that they collectively, based on what they're saying, expect reductions of 1,000 full-time staff. But in fact you're saying that the Treasury Board president's own target for attrition is actually 11,000 full-time staff. They're giving no indication whatsoever of how possibly they're going to arrive at that.
I guess the question is, how can we have any confidence whatsoever in the government's financial forecasts?