So Mr. Rodriguez said he didn't know what happened on August 17. Seriously? He's supposed to be the key person in in the whole process of analyzing the prorogation. He came to see us in committee and told us with a straight face that he didn't know what happened on August 17, and there was a prorogation on August 18.
I'm sorry, but how stupid does he think I am?
I'm not saying that Mr. Rodriguez is lying. Not at all. But what I am saying is that he hasn't shed any light on the whole prorogation issue. I'm sure about that. At one point he said that Technical difficulty close the books on August 18. It took nearly a month for Parliament to reopen. Mr. Rodriguez said that there was nothing unusual about this, that a prorogation took some time, that some studies had to be carried out , that a throne speech had to be written, and so on. Then some specialists came and told us that a prorogation could be done in three days.
You can prorogue on a Thursday and start a new session on the following Monday. Everything Mr. Rodriguez told us by way of explanation was not even close to the truth.
You're trying to tell me that I should be content with Pablo Rodriguez's visit for my analysis of the prorogation. Ms. Duncan mentioned several times that she was a doctor and repeatedly added that it was important to be serious and rational. As for me, all I have is a Master's degree in economics, no Ph.D., but I can tell you that if you want things done properly, you need witnesses and substantial, rock solid, sources to be able to do leading-edge scientific work. As Ms. Duncan would put it, you need the right information.
Until we have it, we won't be able to draw any conclusions as to why there was prorogation. Mr. Rodriguez came to the committee and said things that were not accurate, and he also lacked information. If the government number two comes here and tells us absolutely nothing, then we have a serious problem. If the number two is unable to provide clarification, then we need to wait until number one shows up.
It won't be an inquisition. We have deep respect for the institution and it's the Prime Minister of Canada. Clearly, if we are given the honour of asking him questions, we will do it in accordance with the rules and with the respect appropriate to this type of exchange. We are well aware of this. I certainly am and I'm convinced the Conservatives are aware of this, as are the NDP and of course the Liberals.
I'm wondering what they're afraid of. What do the NDP and the Liberal Party have to fear from the Prime Minister's appearance here?
We're not executioners. We are people who want explanations for the most significant event of this Parliament, which was the prorogation. It's an unusual and major event, and we have the mandate and the responsibility to shed light on the situation. That's what our fellow citizens expect of us.
Members of the other parties, including the Liberal Party, have been telling us that people have not been talking to them about prorogation. The people who have been speaking to me have talked about the WE Charity. They spoke to me about it before and they're still doing so. Despite what my colleagues may think, we're still hearing a lot of talk about it.
To establish a cause and effect relationship, you need to begin with a statistical association. An event occurs at the same time as another. One event, the scandal pertaining to the WE Charity, occurred at the same time as another event, namely prorogation. In science—I'm sure Ms. Duncan will agree with me on this—this is called a statistical association.
For a statistical association to be a cause and effect relationship, you require one thing to lead to another, and to influence it. A causal relationship raises the following question: was the prorogation caused by the WE Charity scandal? In order to answer this, discussion, information and analysis are required.
Until such an analysis has been completed, we will continue to study a statistical association, namely two events that occur jointly without knowing exactly whether there was a cause and effect relationship.
So, if Ms. Duncan and the Liberal Party are in agreement, it's because they do not want to see certain information. I find it very worrisome to have to report this fact to a committee like the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs, which has an excellent reputation. We have to do our work seriously.
I am reaching out to you. Do you want to remain limited to a botched analysis or do you really want to get to the bottom of things, in an intelligent, well-structured, polite and highly respectful manner towards the office of prime minister?
Mr. Trudeau is a prime minister. We owe him respect and I have respect for him. I don't know what he's afraid of. I don't know what the Liberals are afraid of.
Mr. Turnbull discussed this at length. He has carried out some extensive studiesinaudible, as has Ms. Duncan. Do you want to stop at concomitance, at two events that occur without knowing whether there is a causal relationship? Is that what academics like you really want? I would argue that we need to go further and work…