Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
If the committee will allow me, I intend to expand somewhat on certain aspects. I want to take the time to talk about many of the concerns we have on this side of the room.
We feel relatively uneasy about this estimates reform. I have spoken about it to the minister a few times during our recent meetings. I'm a Conservative member, so I may be a little bit biased, but basically, as a member of Parliament, I think we need to take all the precautions necessary when we decide to embark on reform of this scope.
For the past two months, the government has been saying that this is a minimal bureaucratic reform designed to make it easier to examine supplementary estimates. However, it seems to me that this is a far-reaching reform that will probably completely change the way government is accountable to members of Parliament and, ultimately, to Canadians through the existing parliamentary processes.
I would like to review the most important parts of the report tabled by the Parliamentary Budget Officer on November 22. However, before I do that, I would like to reiterate what I said to the minister a month ago. We think that this reform contains two fundamental premises in the face of parliamentary democracy. One is about content and the other about form. Let me explain.
In my view, the first premise relating to parliamentary democratic accountability, that of content, is accountability for numbers. While is is extremely important, it is not ultimately what has enabled parliamentarians and MPs since 1867 to ensure that the government is held maximally accountable for its budgetary actions to voters, parliamentarians and officials, if only for appropriations.
This is my understanding of it. I may be wrong, and I sometimes even wonder whether I'm a little bit crazy, but the Parliamentary Budget Officer's report somewhat reinforced my madness. So I think we want to work on the government's accountability for these numbers and the content of the government's accountability.
Let's also consider the other premise—the format—which may sometimes be seen as less important than the content. But I find it very important and extremely worthwhile for all of us, for Canadians and for the work of MPs. It isn't accountability in terms of numbers, but in terms of the government.
Mr. Brison, I think it would have been wise to say right off the bat that this was a vast parliamentary reform. I also think it should be part of vast consultations with Canadians.
We may think that the best way for the government to be accountable is with numbers, but we think that, for the past 149 years—soon to be 150—it is rather the government's responsibility and accountability for the format.
I would like to quote a paragraph on page 13 of the report released on November 22 by the Parliamentary Budget Officer. It seems to reinforce—