Oh, they did sign their name, but I don't have their consent to give their name, so I'm not going to do that. I didn't seek consent from this person, so I won't give their name, but they did sign their name, yes. It's an email, so obviously their name is attached to the email as well.
At the end of the day, as I said, I don't necessarily agree with everything in there. I mentioned the four-day workweek. I acknowledge that probably not too many MPs are looking to try to go home to put their feet up and watch TV on a Friday, but Justin Trudeau and others are trying to avoid being held accountable in question period, certainly, on Fridays.
I think the sentiment of the letter says a lot. This person has very strong feelings about the fact that this government is trying to avoid being held accountable. It's the point I'm making, but it shows that Canadians are seeing that as well.
I'll read another one. Someone from Surrey, British Columbia, wrote this one. Again, I haven't pre-screened these. I'm just picking out of a random pile of thousands of these things I've received. This one says: “Good day, members of Parliament. Thank you for your service to this great nation of Canada. I appreciate your sacrifice for democracy. I'm writing you concerning the motion put forth by MP Scott Simms to change the House rules. I ask that you protect the freedom we have within our democracy and put a stop to this bill.”
There's a different tone to this letter, obviously, Mr. Chair. This one is asking the members to protect democracy rather than expressing an outrage at what's happening. I think it's meant from the same place, but just takes a different approach.
The writer goes on to say this: “Under the guise of efficiency, this motion will limit and restrict accountability in our government. Perhaps the energy for efficiency could be channelled to the budget. I appreciate the creativity this government has put into finding ways to get more money out of my pocket. Perhaps we should focus that excellent ability to lessen its spending instead of increasing it and seemingly dodging work.
“I do not agree with the House not sitting on Fridays. There are a lot of important issues to be handled by our government, so working one less day in the House limits the ability to deal with them. I understand that your role is taxing, and I thank you for your service, but this is what you were elected to do. It is a tough job. I also believe the Prime Minister must show up for more than one day of question period per week. Does he have a problem with accountability? He is the leader of this country and should be there to run it, and be held accountable to its due process.
“I do not agree with limiting debate time within committees and debate time within the House. This, to me, represents a clear attempt to avoid accountability. You have an opposition for a reason. You are not a dictatorship. The seats belong to the people and not to any one party. Not every idea you come up with is a good one, and that is why we have MPs in place to question them, like this very issue.
“How are my concerns as a citizen being heard when you limit my voice? Written questions submitted to MPs should have a time limit on response: 45 days seems fair. Having no required response time would allow for MPs to disregard questions they don't want to deal with, as you are to represent all of us and deal with questions you might not want to.
“Lastly, the approach with which this motion has been tabled seems deceptive. I am all for efficiencies and accept modernization with caution, but the week of the budget seems not the time. What do you have to hide? Why has there been so little information provided to Canadians about this? Canadians should be made aware of an issue like this, a fundamental change to our democratic process. It should be wide open for debate and discussion. I ask that you stop this motion. I ask that you uphold accountability and transparency within our government.
“Thank you for your representation in the House of Commons.”
This one is signed “respectfully”.
Again, it has a different tone but makes the same basic point. There's a feeling here from this citizen as well that the government is trying to avoid accountability, that the Prime Minister is trying to avoid accountability. That comes across very clearly in this letter, with things like, “How are my concerns as a citizen being heard when you limit my voice?”, and “Not every idea you come up with is a good one, and that is why we have MPs in place to question them, like this very issue”, and “I do not agree with limiting debate time within committees”.
It talks about Justin Trudeau: “He is the leader of this country and should be there to run it, and be held accountable to its due process.” It asks, “Does he have a problem with accountability?” It's clear. Then she closes with, “I ask that you uphold accountability and transparency within our government.”
That's what she's asking for.