But it seems to me that when the finance minister stands up and says, “We're whittling away the deficit”, it's under direction at the cabinet table to cut and hack and slash and make sure you don't spend anywhere near the money that was approved by Parliament. There is something disingenuous about this, which is what I'm getting at, and it's the political lens that Gerry is looking through and I am, too.
We lived for years with completely disingenuous budgets under the Liberal regime. There were surpluses but we were told all through the year, “No, there is not a penny. Sorry, the cupboard is bare, not a nickel” and then this rabbit gets pulled out of the hat, a $10 billion surplus, and everyone had been told there wasn't a nickel to be spent.
I sense something similar happening today because it worked so well, frankly, in the last administration. That's more of a comment than a question.
My question would be something that's come out of the whole Prime Minister's Office/Senate scandal. Deloitte Touche was given a $20-million contract to advise government how to save money, $90,000 per day. You think that giving Mike Duffy $90,000 was bad; this is $90,000 per day.
First of all, isn't that cabinet's job or your job to advise government? Does that Deloitte & Touche contract and other Deloitte & Touche contracts go through Treasury Board? Do they advise you?