Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Happy new year, everybody. I hope everybody had a chance for a restful and festive holiday season. I'm looking forward to joining you all in Ottawa as well.
I have a number of things to say.
First of all, when Mr. Ellis was talking about this 106(4), I think he made a reference to the Bloc signing the 106(4). The implication was that the NDP did not sign it. One thing that needs to be clarified for the record is that the NDP never saw this motion. We were not given an opportunity to sign it or not sign it.
Mr. Ellis sent a request for me to look at whether we would entertain a 106(4) motion on the BTNX data issue, not on Medicago. For anybody listening, it has to be clear that we were not invited to see this motion in advance or given a chance to support it or not.
Second, I want to say for the record that this is, once again, an opportunity for me to express my grave disappointment in both the Conservatives, frankly, and the government for opposing the NDP's motion moved at this committee to amend legislation that would have produced an independent public inquiry into all matters of the government's handling of the COVID pandemic under the Inquiries Act. Somewhat shamefully, I watched the Conservatives sit on their hands and abstain, which allowed for my motion to be defeated. We would have had legislation before the House right now that would be close to setting up such a commission, which would look not only at Medicago but at every vaccine contract.
When the Conservatives come to this committee and talk about transparency and disclosure, Canadians need to know that they prevented that very disclosure and transparency from happening, broadly speaking, on the COVID pandemic entirely. That is a contradiction that needs to be stated for the record.
The NDP's position on how the government handled the COVID pandemic and how it deal with health-related matters is that we have been pro-transparency from the very beginning. We believe that taxpayers have a right to know how their money is spent, and that parliamentarians have a duty to probe and hold the government accountable.
I remember Prime Minister Trudeau's statement when he was elected in 2015 that he believed in a government that was “open by default”. I think that's a wise way to approach it. As a starting point, we should be very open and transparent even when hard and embarrassing information and mistakes are exposed—arguably, particularly when errors are made. It's important that we have an open airing in a democracy.
Having said that, I can appreciate as well, having sat through many debates on this.... I moved a motion in the last Parliament to have disclosure of all the vaccine contracts. To the Conservatives' credit at that time, with my colleague Michelle Rempel Gardner and other Conservatives, we joined together to seek and obtain vaccine contracts.
Through that process, we were all made aware that totally unredacted contracts for commercial arrangements from the government are delicate matters. I can appreciate that there can be certain commercial sensitivities. An example is price. When you have commercial vendors dealing with the government and multiple competitors are competing, they probably don't want their internal pricing structure to necessarily be known by their competitors. I understand the need for some redaction.
I will say that I think that concept has been overrelied upon by this government, and that's been unfortunate. I think too many things have been held back under the guise that they're commercially sensitive when they really aren't, so we have to be careful to strike that balance.
Moving to this motion here, I have to agree with my colleague Dr. Hanley in that I fail to see the urgency in this. A 106(4) meeting is a particular type of vehicle that's used to upset the regular schedule that's been agreed upon. To me, as a responsible parliamentarian, it's used when an urgent matter of national importance requires our committee's attention.
I would point out that we do have an open Medicago study and that this motion could have been moved at any time during that or during our regular sittings. I don't really understand why we're here on a Friday during our constituency weeks, as Dr. Hanley mentioned, talking about getting a contract. The issue is done. The contracts are there. They're not going to change this week or a week or two from now. We're talking about contracts that were signed several years ago, so I don't see the urgency.
The other thing I wanted to mention is that I think there's a line to be drawn between health issues and procurement issues. When I read this motion.... I didn't get a chance to study it in detail obviously because we got it only this morning, but when I read the motion that was originally put before us and as amended, it is deeply delving into issues of procurement, intellectual property and financial transactions. We are the health committee. There is an industry committee. As has already been pointed out several times, the Medicago contract was sought and obtained at the public accounts committee, so we have multiple committees that are looking at this.
The question I have in my mind is whether this is a good use of our time as the health committee, particularly, as I will talk about in a moment, given the competing priorities, because we can't deal with everything. We have to prioritize our issues. Is this motion to have Minister Champagne, who's not even the minister responsible to this committee, come before us as we delve into commercial transactions and fiscal issues around procurement, as important as they are...?
I will grant that to Mr. Perkins. I want to commend him for the deep dive he's done on this. He appears extremely knowledgeable about this. He's clearly read the contracts in great detail. It's not that they're not important. The issue is whether or not this committee, as the health committee, is the proper venue for that. I find myself being unpersuaded.
I want to talk about the competing priorities. We have a women's health study that's under way. That's never been studied by this committee. Fifty per cent of the Canadian population and all of the health issues that pertain to that 50% are currently the subject of this study. That would have to be postponed.
Second, we have the opioid overdose crisis. Quite rightly, we listened to several filibusters before Christmas by Conservatives who went on and on at length about how critical the opioid overdose crisis is and how massively important it was that we get to that right now, so much so that they moved and we agreed to disrupt the schedule of the women's health study by interjecting meetings of the opioid overdose study. By the way, I want to commend Dr. Hanley for moving it. It was his motion to put the opioid overdose crisis before this committee.
We have many other issues of momentous importance to health in this country, including indigenous health and including the fact that millions of Canadians can't see a family doctor. We have a nursing crisis. We have issues of all types. We have a diabetes crisis. We have many issues to talk about.
In my mind I'm thinking, do I want to devote six meetings to delving into the ministry of innovation's dealings with a foreign company on how they handled the fiscal arrangements and the transfer of intellectual property? I find myself saying that it doesn't meet my priorities, nor does it jibe with what I'm hearing from my constituents about what they want to see from their health care system.
Fiscal probity is important. Financial accountability is important. Nobody wants to see waste. I think the Conservative motion is very good at raising the importance of those issues, but public accounts is looking at this. The committee for industry and innovation can look at this as well. To me, I think that's the more appropriate place for it.
I find myself unclear as well about what exactly has not been disclosed, because the Medicago contract was disclosed in largely unredacted form, if not unredacted form. I think Dr. Hanley's motion, if I'm not mistaken and I may be, replicates the conditions that surrounded the disclosure of the Medicago vaccine contract at public accounts.
Mr. Perkins read some very pertinent, I think, sections of that contract that gave us the information we need. I mean, there's an issue, I suppose, of whether the answers given by the ministers and the president of Medicago are consistent with that or not, but that's not an issue of disclosure. That's an issue of, I guess, politics and satisfaction of answer. The information is there. It's revealed. Mr. Perkins was reading it, so I'm not quite clear what information remains unknown from the Medicago vaccine contract.
I also want to say that Mr. Perkins, in his last intervention, said something about the fact that the amendment made by Dr. Hanley isn't consistent with this, or that it somehow gags us. I don't read anything in Dr. Hanley's motion that says we can't speak about it. There's nothing in there that says that, after reading that contract, we can't come and speak publicly about it or raise it at this committee. The amendment says, “that, when these documents are received by the clerk, they be available at the clerk's office for viewing by committee members only, for one week to be designated by the committee no later than 30 days”, and that it be “under the supervision of the clerk and that no personal mobile, electronic or recording devices of any kind be permitted in the room”. That means you can't take pictures of it. You also can't take notes “out of the room”. That just means you can read it and you can talk about it. You just can't take it.
I would assume that this is because we as committee members will be allowed, even under this amendment, to read the full and unredacted version of the contract and will be able to speak about it. What we don't want to do is disclose that, because we will be seeing, I would imagine, commercially sensitive information.
I just want to say for the record that it's an interesting point in history. If the time ever comes when there is a Conservative government, I will remember this day very clearly and make sure that any future Conservative government reveals full and unredacted versions of all the commercial contracts they have with all vendors with the federal government. We'll see if that happens. I did serve under majority and minority Conservative governments, and I can tell you that this was absolutely not the position of any Conservative government or Conservative member of Parliament that I ever saw. It was quite the opposite, actually.
I think the amendment is a measured amendment. It allows us to see the unredacted version of the contract, which I think is a good thing. It allows us then to see whether there's anything in the redacted versions that might cause us to want to schedule more time or recall a minister.
I want to say again, six meetings...? Nothing I've heard today would warrant devoting six meetings to this—that's the better part of a month in parliamentary calendar terms—when we don't even really know if the unredacted versions will indicate anything particularly profound or untoward. Maybe it will, but what I'd like to do is move in a measured fashion, read the contract and see the unredacted version. Then we can decide as a committee, if we want to, or individually, whether we think there's anything that is worth putting back before the committee to study.
Again, what I'll be looking for as well is whether or not I think this is more of an issue for finance or procurement or industry, or whether it's a matter that ought to occupy the health committee's attention at this time, given the very pressing, urgent and frankly fatal issues facing many Canadians while we talk.
I'll conclude with this: Do Canadians want us to be getting on with the opioid study, where families right now have loved ones who are dying today—if I'm not mistaken about the number, seven people will die in Canada today from the opioid overdose crisis—or do they want us to be delving into the minutiae of an intellectual property transfer between several companies and the government when other committees are seized of the matter and are more properly mandated to deal with them?
I would rather deal with the matters of life and death, and health—pure health—that are before this committee, as opposed to grandstanding to try to embarrass the government in many different ways. I support the amendment, and I'll be voting in favour of it.