Thank you, Mr. Chair.
This clause has been a subject of discussion at the committee for a long time. We've all come to a broad consensus I think on all sides—Liberals, Conservatives, Bloc and NDP—that the current clause is not acceptable. In short, it purports to provide the Minister of Health with the ability to establish an advisory committee to review the response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. For a variety of reasons, that is not acceptable, nor I think advisable.
For one, the Minister of Health is the minister in charge of the Public Health Agency of Canada. That's the lead agency, which is designed for the express purpose of and charged with the responsibility of preparing for pandemics and large-scale public health issues and dealing with them. The prospect of having the Minister of Health, who is ultimately responsible for that preparedness, choose the people who would review his very conduct is a direct conflict of interest and is unacceptable on that ground alone.
The other thing that I think is fair to remind all committee members of is that I undertook to work with parliamentary counsel to determine whether or not we could remove this clause and replace it with a better kind of COVID inquiry. We went back and forth on it. My last report to committee was that it was difficult to do. The legislative counsel was concerned about whether such an amendment would be outside the scope of the bill, or conversely whether or not it would require a royal recommendation.
I was just advised last week, on Thursday, by legislative counsel that an amendment could be made to do that. I've decided to table that before the committee.
I think we might all remember that there was a broad consensus to remove clause 3 completely from the bill in the event that we couldn't fix it. That's the alternate position. Because the proposal to have the COVID inquiry is within the scope of the bill, I thought I would move it anyway, so that my colleagues could have a chance to consider that and vote on it. If it doesn't pass, then I will, of course, be moving an amendment—or I will vote against the clause—to remove it from the bill completely.
Briefly, I want to speak to what the amendment does. I think all of my colleagues have it.
Essentially, it removes the advisory committee appointed by the Minister of Health and changes it to this:
3(1) Within 90 days after the day on which this Act comes into force, an inquiry under Part I of the Inquiries Act must be undertaken into the response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Canada.
(2) In conducting the inquiry, the commissioners are,
They are charged with the very same scope or review that is currently in the bill, which I am going to go over because I think it's important for us to understand. It says that those commissioners will “among other things”, and it's important to note that it's inclusive, not restrictive to the following. Therefore, the commissioners can go anywhere else they want. However, specifically they're directed to do the following:
(a) assess the capability of the Public Health Agency of Canada and the Department of Health to respond to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic before and during the pandemic;
(b) in collaboration with provincial and municipal governments, assess the public health and pandemic response capabilities of those governments;
(c) assess the effectiveness of the exercise of powers under any applicable federal laws before, during and after the pandemic and of the coordination of measures taken under those laws; and
(d) analyse the health, economic and social factors relevant to the impact of the pandemic in Canada.
To read those underscores how profoundly important and broad the inquiry could be. It will look at everything about the COVID-19 pandemic and the way that the federal government, and the other governments it worked in coordination with, handled it.
I think this is important, because an inquiry under the Inquiries Act satisfies what the NDP has been calling for from the beginning, and I think other parties have as well—namely, that any inquiry into the COVID-19 pandemic is essential. We need to have an impartial, independent, public and properly resourced inquiry to undertake this work. There are several reasons for this.
One reason is that, if we don't take the time to learn the lessons of the last pandemic, we will not be as prepared for the next one. It was said many times in the pandemic that we shouldn't waste a crisis. Well, we had one of the most profoundly disrupting crises of the century. I think we need to understand the lessons of that.
Number two is accountability. That's not the same as blame. We're not looking to blame anybody. An inquiry does not find blame. An inquiry has no powers to find blame. What it does do, though, is hold the parties and organizations that are responsible for protecting the public accountable for that. If we don't have an inquiry, then we don't have that accountability.
I would point out that an inquiry under the Inquiries Act has powers that I think are essential. It has the power to subpoena documents. It has the power to compel the attendance of witnesses. It also is resourced and assisted by counsel. All of those things are critical for the one overarching goal that I think we must all keep in mind as parliamentarians, which is the confidence of the public. This inquiry should not be a partisan exercise. It should be one that looks at a whole-of-government response and determines what was done, what was done well and what was not done well. Where were the acts of commission and the acts of omission? Ultimately, it's to come up with a series of recommendations so that we can fix this problem and.... “Fix” is too strong a word. It's so that we can be better prepared for the next pandemic, which experts routinely tell us is not a matter of if but when.
I have a couple of final observations. During the pandemic, I worked closely with my colleagues, some of whom are on this committee, and with former colleagues like Michelle Rempel Garner, who was the health critic at that time. We all saw major errors made in the way we prepared for the pandemic and in the way we didn't prepare for it. We had a shortage of PPE. We had no real inventory system for personal protective equipment and the other important resources that we would need in the case of a pandemic. For some reason, we suspended the very excellent early warning system in public health that had been in place to give Canadians early warnings of pandemics. We had early issues on whether or not masking was appropriate. We don't produce vaccines. A number of issues needed to be looked at. We also did a number of things well. It's important to point that out as well.
At the time, every time one of the opposition parties raised this issue of trying to find out what was going on, to hold people accountable and to find out how we could do better, we were told by various members of the Liberal government, including Minister Hajdu, who was the then health minister, followed by Minister Duclos, who was her successor, and including Prime Minister Trudeau, that there would be a time and place for that kind of assessment, and it was not then. We accepted that.
I remember that, among my Conservatives colleagues, my Bloc colleagues and my NDP colleagues, we accepted that, when we were in the middle of a global pandemic and an emergency, the first most important thing to do was to deal with that emergency. There would be a time and a place later, when the emergency was under control, for us to undertake that work.
Colleagues, that time is now. The WHO has lifted the designation of the global pandemic. We are clearly past that time of emergency. I know that COVID is still with us, and we have residual impacts, some of which are serious, but we are no longer in that emergency time.
I note that the U.K. is undertaking a public inquiry, and I note that the British Medical Journal, which has done a very deep dive into the way Canada handled our emergency, also suggests that Canada undertake a public inquiry. The real question, then, is what kind of inquiry we should have. Should it be one appointed by the sitting government with people who are hand-picked by that government, hand-picked by the very person whose responsibilities may be in question?
That clearly is not acceptable. It shouldn't be acceptable no matter what the hue of government is. It's just not structurally sound.
I think—and where I'll conclude is this—the most important people in this entire discussion are the Canadian public. Their confidence has been tested and it has been shaken. The only way to restore confidence in the public is to have the courage to have a full, broad, root-to-branch, transparent and searching public inquiry into how the COVID-19 pandemic was handled.
Again, we do not want this to be a partisan circus. What we want this to be is a properly run inquiry. The way we do that in Canada is with an inquiry under the Inquiries Act. Obviously, it would be a judge who would be appointed, who would be properly resourced and who would have the parameters of the Inquiries Act legislation and the guidance of previous inquiries. By the way, I want to remind everybody that there were inquiries done after SARS. One was done in Ontario. It wasn't an inquiry under the Inquiries Act federally, but there was a similar type of approach.
I think that only by having that independent, public, searching inquiry can we actually make sure that the public can have confidence, that the recommendations that come out of that inquiry are sound and that they weren't tainted by political considerations by anybody of any hue, and that we can keep in mind the one overarching goal that all Canadians want and we, as a health committee, I think, share, which is that we want to be better prepared for next time.
I'm going to ask my colleagues to support the NDP motion to replace this clause with the advisory committee appointed by the Minister of Health with a truly independent, public and transparent inquiry. Failing that, as I've said, I would rather that this clause be removed entirely if we don't actually make sure that we have the type of inquiry that I think we all know deep down is what is truly required in the circumstances.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.