Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I have an opening presentation to make. I encourage you to stop my presentation when you've had enough or if you think members may want to ask some questions rather than listen to me any longer.
Lawyers, as you know—hopefully you don't know from direct experience—when they have clients who are faced with an action brought against them in the courts, have to advise the clients as to what the case is that might be brought against the clients for the clients to consider whether they want to go forward on a guilty plea or a not-guilty plea.
In a trial, at the end of the trial, the lawyer on one side will summarize the evidence and then make arguments from that, and the lawyer on the other side will summarize the evidence and make arguments from that. Of course, in their summaries they will summarize the evidence in a way that's most favourable to their client.
What I propose to do today is not summarize the evidence favourable to either side, but just summarize the evidence as to what I think is out there that the committee ought to consider. I would preface that first by saying that, as other witnesses have said, this is a very important matter where a member, in this case a minister, is accused of deliberately misleading the House—by “House”, I include the committee. I would only offer this comment, if I may, on your behalf, as the Law Clerk of the House: as serious as the offence is, and for good reason, the evidence ought to be weighed in a manner that's serious and balanced and is convincing at the end of the day.
The motion to the House is that the matter concerning statements by the minister be referred to this committee. It doesn't say what statements. So the first question I had to ask myself in preparing for this meeting is what statements we are talking about.
If you look to the ruling by the Speaker, it seems to me the Speaker in this case didn't come to any conclusion as to whether there had been any misleading, but he did come to the conclusion that there had been some confusion for members caused by the minister's statements or non-statements and that he thought this was a matter this committee should look into more profoundly and report to the House, hopefully with a resolution to that confusion so that in future the facts are clear.
The facts may be clear at this point, after all the testimony the committee has heard, but having clarified the facts, the committee is still arguably entitled to go back and see if there was at any point in time a misrepresentation made to the House that ought not to have been made, a misrepresentation that was deliberately made, and one on which members had to rely and govern themselves for some period of time until it was corrected.
So with that preface, let me first begin by saying it seems to me that there are two statements, for lack of a better term, that give rise to the charge of misleading the House: one is the statement made in the committee meeting of December 9, and the other is the statement in the House that this CIDA decision was the result of an examination of the merits of the application by the CIDA officials.
The statement in the House was initially made by the parliamentary secretary to the minister, not the minister. The parliamentary secretary later corrected himself. He made his initial statement on March 15, and he later corrected himself on December 13. Arguably, after December 13 there was no confusion about that aspect, as the parliamentary secretary had apologized for his error. However, between March 15 and December 13, a period of several months, the House was left to understand that the statement by the parliamentary secretary was the truth, and the question this committee might ask itself is whether the minister in that period of time could have or should have intervened at some point and made the record clear. I'm not aware of any statement made by the minister in the House or elsewhere, in the committee, doing that.
Before I go further, I should point out that I have not looked at what statements may or may not have been made elsewhere by the minister or parliamentary secretary or any other member of the government. This claim for misleading the House is based on what is said in the House or at committee. It is with respect to that record that I am making my remarks today.
On the statement in the committee, the question asked of the minister was whether she inserted the word “not” in the document. She said she did not. The question was not asked to her whether she might know how the word “not” found its way into the document. Accordingly, she did not have any testimony before the committee on that point.
The issue this committee has to address is the standard of truthfulness that's to be expected of ministers--and frankly, of any witness--when they appear before committees. Is it good enough that a witness seemingly has to wait for the right question—or from the witness's point of view, perhaps the wrong question—to be asked and then respond truthfully? When it's evident from the question or a series of questions what the interest of the committee is, should the witness volunteer information that may go beyond the terms of the question but would provide a more complete and full answer to the committee? I'm not answering that question now, but I raise it to you: that is the question the committee has to ask itself regarding that testimony.
Going back to the other issue, of whether the decision was based on the recommendation of the CIDA officials, that too is something for the committee to assess as to the gravity of that oversight. It's an offence by omission rather than commission, if you like. I have not found any statement on the record where the minister said what the parliamentary secretary earlier said. So in that sense there was no statement by the minister that could be said to cause the House to be misled.
Arguably, there was an opportunity to make a statement that would have clarified the situation earlier than December 13, 2010, when the parliamentary secretary made his apology to the House and clarified his earlier statement.
I'll leave it at that for the moment, Mr. Chairman, and take questions.