Thank you, Mr. Chair.
This has been really disappointing, I have to say. I was very clear.
I'm sorry; I'll just stand back here. I've been away for four weeks, and I've missed committees so much. Now I'm excited.
We had an opportunity today to do two things at once: to recognize the important issues raised by my privilege motion and also to deal with Mr. Johns' motion.
I put forward a privilege motion because I believe that the privileges of members of Parliament are now under threat. They are under threat because we have a situation in which people came before our committee and provided frank and candid testimony in which they were critical of other public servants and, indirectly, a minister. They did so in response to questions that were asked. They weren't particularly critical in their opening statements, as I recall, but they gave frank answers in response to frank questions.
Immediately after that, those individuals were subject to severe retaliation: the extremely rare situation of public servants' being suspended without pay. This is what happened to Mr. MacDonald and Mr. Utano. We're concerned about what this does for them, but this particularly raises significant questions about the integrity of our democratic processes.
We have been trying to get to the bottom of what happened in the ArriveCAN scandal. We have had people, public servants and consultants repeatedly lying and accusing each other of lying before this committee. Creating an environment in which witnesses can appear and can speak the truth and be protected while they speak the truth is going to be our only way of getting to the bottom of what happened. As such, I raised a privilege question, which, according to the rules—which I did not make up—takes precedence over the motion that was on the floor. I intended to do that in my final round of questions. However, Mr. Johns moved a motion beforehand.
Mr. Johns says that he wants his motion on CEBA dealt with. Well, if we had gone to the vote and had passed the motion related to recognizing the abuse of privilege that took place, then we would have immediately returned to Mr. Johns' motion. I certainly would have been favourably disposed to wanting to work collaboratively on that.
Mr. Johns chose to throw in his lot with the increasingly evidently corrupt Liberal government in choosing to bury that question of privilege. Liberals and New Democrats voted together to kill that question of privilege, which means that we will not be able to proceed, at least on that particular question of privilege, and address this issue moving forward. It is gravely concerning to me that we have Liberals and New Democrats trying to bury this issue of retaliation against public servants who speak out. It suggests to me that Liberals and New Democrats don't want to get to the bottom of what happened with ArriveCAN. They don't want public servants to feel comfortable telling the truth. Instead, they want public servants to feel intimidated, to worry for their jobs, and to, therefore, come here and toe the party line.
That's not what I want. What I want is public servants feeling that they can be frank and honest and that, when they're frank and honest before a committee, they will be protected. It was clear to me today from the testimony that we received—from the witnesses that were before us—that they could provide no explanation for why witnesses, immediately after they appeared before this committee, received letters telling them that they were under a cloud of investigation. Subsequently, they had support for their legal fees pulled. Now they are on leave without pay.
We have retaliation against public servants who come before committee and try to provide frank answers to clear questions. What is the government trying to hide and bury on this?