Thank you, Mr. Chair. Welcome, Mr. Minister.
All of us here around this table have had to leave our ridings in the middle of the parliamentary recess. Like you, we have surely had to cancel important representational activities to be able to make an urgent decision in a few days about whether the government complied with an order of the House, as the Speaker asked us to do. He also asked us to report on our observations, recommendations and suggestions, which we will do later this afternoon. We have listened to a series of witnesses and ministers before you. They feel and trust that they have given us everything we need to understand. We disagree with them completely.
I would like to come back to a few points. Today is March 17. I would like to give a little background to understand what exactly is happening. We'll recall that, on November 24, the government sent the committee a memo saying that the projections of corporate profits before taxes and effective corporate income tax rates are basically cabinet confidence documents and that the government was unable to provide those documents to the Standing Committee on Finance, as requested by the committee.
A month later, on December 1, we received the same answer to another request. We were told that the information requested was subject to cabinet confidence. On February 7, Member of Parliament Scott Brison raised a question of privilege following two refusals by the government to provide this information. On February 17, under pressure—that's my personal interpretation—the government submitted a three-page document containing a table detailing certain amounts relating to bills.
On February 17, the government decided that certain documents that it had previously deemed confidential could now be provided. Today is March 17. Yesterday, March 16, we received another packet of documents dealing basically with the same information received on February 17.
I'm wondering why your government, which prides itself on being so transparent, had to wait until there was pressure by parliamentarians to finally say that what was confidential no longer is and to think that the table from February 17 was would satisfy the parliamentarians' information requests.
You are an experienced MP. You are now a minister. Can you explain to me why a document that was deemed confidential on November 24 and confirmed to be confidential on December 1 can all of a sudden be deemed non-confidential? Cabinet confidence is being lifted and some data is being given to parliamentarians.