Thanks.
I appreciate what Mr. Chan is saying. I get a sense the government sort of got.... Talking about privilege, this thing is borderline privilege with respect to being able to do your job, and I don't know why the government would want to put us on edge in matters of privilege. I can't imagine this is helpful to your cause. I leave it with you. I know it's aggravating the hell out of me.
I hear the point Mr. Chan is making. It sounds a bit like the government has two tracks going. One is if they can effectively kill this through some of the arguments that Mr. Reid effectively dissected. In the other case, we get Mr. Chan, who says, “You know, we're in your hands and we're ready to go the other way”. The story isn't about the government trying to kill it—it looks like they're trying to hit that sweet spot. I get it.
Mr. Chan made a very good point, as he usually does. If we look at our notes, though, we see the government in the past said that they reviewed all their procedures—and I think those procedures might have been reviewed by this committee—and they went back and improved those procedures and then published them in the government's response to the committee report.
Clearly, there is an ability to define and identify what information we're talking about. If the last government was prepared to acknowledge something had gone wrong, and they made changes, I don't need to take the argument too far to suggest that this government now has an obligation to also acknowledge that there is a process, that there is information.
I agree completely with Mr. Reid. Either we change the rules so that this is not considered a breach, or we really do something. When it's raised in the House as a breach we know the kind of attention it gets—a whole flurry of activity. It's a big deal inside the bubble, a very big deal.
When the Speaker says he sees a prima facie case, and that means that effectively it would take a motion to refer it to PROC, then the House is saying this is really important and they've dealt with it and it is going to PROC. If it comes to PROC and all PROC does is whimper away and wimp out on the deal and say that it's not a big deal, then what are we doing to our system of privilege? We're watering down our own rights.
Either those rights are there and they're identifiable and supportable and we're prepared to support them all the way through to taking action against those who violate them, or we're not.
If the government wants to suggest that we change the rules, if we follow Madam Vandenbeld's point that these things are fairly routine—and I'm not trying to put words in her mouth—then we ought to make a change. But to me, what we ought not do is go down the road that Mr. Reid said could happen. We make a big deal of it in the House, and we talk about privilege, and the Speaker gets in full flight and does his thing and it gets sent off, and then it comes here and it effectively withers away and dies. That's not helping any one of us.
Given that the last government recognized there were procedures and that they could improve those procedures, I would suggest that if this government hasn't bothered to do any kind of review, what they're doing is forcing us to do it. If we have to take the time to do it, we can. I suggest that one of the places to start is the previous protocol—or ask the government if they have a protocol. But I have to tell you, the government is not doing itself any favours treating this the way they did, especially given the new era that they are supposedly bringing us into.
Thanks.