Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you, Mr. Franks.
Thank you for reminding us in your opening remarks of the gravity of this situation. It's not a matter to be taken lightly. In fact, it's the highest voice or opinion we can render on an issue: to find someone in contempt.
Also, thank you for pointing out that Parliament is not always correct, that Parliament has been wrong in the past, and that Louis Riel was a hero, not a traitor, and probably should never have been found in contempt of Parliament.
So as we go into this study, I think we should be aware of the gravity of what we're about to undertake.
I take your point that the scale of the offence is irrelevant. The magnitude, the scope of it, may not be as expansive as the issue of the long-form census, but I liken it to an employee who steals stationery. An employee may be disciplined for that, even though it's a minor offence, but you just don't know what else is going on.
I guess my question to you, Mr. Franks.... It's plausible, in the way we've outlined things, that Minister Oda did follow the advice of her senior staff and did sign off on the Kairos grant, and somebody else, some other party, came along after the fact, even after she had applied her signature to it, and inserted the word “not”.
We have a feeling that Prime Minister Harper uses his cabinet as more of a focus group than any meaningful power anyway, so somebody from the PMO could have intercepted this and added the word “not” after Minister Oda had dutifully followed the recommendation of her staff. Is that not true?