Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank Mrs. Block for putting forward this important motion.
We have seen across this NDP-Liberal government so many examples of outrageous contracting irregularities. Taxpayers are now coming to see the pattern through which their money is wasted through broken, unfair, unreasonable contracting processes that reward well-connected NDP-Liberal insiders and do not deliver value for money.
We have seen this pattern over and over again. This committee has done extensive work on the arrive scam scandal, but we are now seeing that the arrive scam scandal is the tip of the iceberg. It's part of a larger pattern, which is that we have a government that is focused on paying and rewarding well-connected NDP-Liberal insiders instead of delivering efficient, effective results for Canadians. There is so much waste. There is so much in the way of savings to be realized and value to be created by improving the system.
Mr. Chair, it's not lost on me and, I think, on many Canadians that many of the people who are at the centre of sketchy procurement and contracting questions also happen to be those who are being considered or who want to be considered for future Liberal leadership.
We have Minister Anita Anand, the President of the Treasury Board, and all the problems we have seen there. We have the public safety minister responsible for the CBSA where the arrive scam scandal is happening now being rumoured...and now Minister Joly with the contracting problems at Global Affairs.
I would say that these ministers responsible for outrageous procurement problems within their departments who are looking for a promotion in their role should come before the committee and provide an explanation for their management of their current roles and the procurement problems we have seen.
It's a common-sense motion, giving Minister Joly an opportunity to be accountable and to provide a report to this committee on what has happened. I hope that members will see the obvious logic of supporting this motion that the minister should appear. I will say, Mr. Chair, that hopefully it's not on the 29th as well. You never know with the government. However, if the only time she will come is from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. on the 29th, we will take it. Ministers need to provide responses.
I will say, as well, that this committee has developed, I think, over the months we have been working on this issue, a particular experience and knowledge as it relates to government procurement problems, best practices and how far this current government is missing the mark when it comes to best practices for procurement. I think we are ready and well positioned to do this.
As the various leadership candidates try to position themselves for being the future leader of the Liberal Party, they should be willing to, in their current roles, come before committee and provide answers.
I will say, as well, that this committee has rightly asserted the prerogatives of parliamentary committees when it comes to getting answers from government contractors. Kristian Firth was supposed to appear. He refused to appear. He refused summons. Eventually, he appeared before this committee, but he didn't answer key questions. As a result of that, we made a report to the House, and he was summoned to appear before the House.
It would seem to me that after we have established that we are committed to ensuring that the private citizens who are involved in sketchy government contracting provide answers, we should be equally insistent and equally willing to use the tools that are available to us to assert also that ministers of the Crown who are elected and charged by the executive with running departments and being accountable for them provide answers for what happens in their departments.
If we're going to go all the way to say that Kristian Firth, Darren Anthony and other such people have to provide responses to committees, then we should say the same thing about ministers of the Crown and should not have a dynamic in which cover is provided for ministers not being accountable for those activities.
I hope that we see consistency from this committee and that we expect the same accountability of ministers as we have asked for from private citizens involved in contracting. I look forward to seeing where members land on that.
Chair, I'll wrap up my remarks on that point.