For the Liberals to say that we should just move to clause-by-clause misses the point of this motion. What this motion demands is that there be a level of accountability for the cynical and dishonest attempt to secure pensions for soon-to-be-defeated Liberal and NDP MPs.
It's important to note the history of the drafting of this elections bill. It really is a pension bill in disguise, because we know that the NDP was heavily involved in drafting it, for all intents and purposes.
NDP critic and former member of Parliament Daniel Blaikie was the co-author of this bill. Mr. Blaikie was quoted in a CTV news article on January 27, 2024, as saying that “a fair amount of work [was] done” towards drafting what is now Bill C-65. The headline was “Trudeau and Singh's teams quietly planning electoral reform legislation”. Mr. Blaikie stood side by side with Minister LeBlanc after Minister LeBlanc tabled the bill at a press conference that Minister LeBlanc convened to try to sell to Canadians that the date of the election had been changed to avoid conflicting with a cultural holiday. Mr. Blaikie and the NDP were in on it. They were working hand in glove with the Liberals and with Minister LeBlanc, and that's not speculation. It was obvious when Daniel Blaikie said that a fair amount of work had been done towards drafting this bill and then showed up and stood side by side with Minister LeBlanc.
We also have learned, as a result of the appearances of Mr. Sutherland from the Privy Council Office and of the Chief Electoral Officer, Mr. Perrault, that secret meetings were held between the Liberal government, the NDP and the Chief Electoral Officer specifically about the drafting of this bill. Based on the submission of the Chief Electoral Officer, there were two meetings involving the Liberal government, the NDP and the Chief Electoral Officer. One meeting was on January 25, which just happened to be two days before Daniel Blaikie was quoted as saying that “a fair amount of work [was] done” towards drafting the bill. At that January 25 meeting with the Chief Electoral Officer were staff from the Prime Minister's Office, staff from the minister's office, staff from the Prime Minister's department, the PCO, and staff from Elections Canada. That was the first meeting.
At the second meeting, held on March 30, in addition to the Chief Electoral Officer being present, there was Minister Dominic LeBlanc; the co-author of this bill, NDP MP Daniel Blaikie; the parliamentary secretary to Minister LeBlanc, Jennifer O'Connell; staff from the minister's office; staff from the PCO; and staff from MP Blaikie's office. My note says staff from the MP's office, so I presume that is in reference to Daniel Blaikie's staff being present. There was also staff from Elections Canada.
These are, I must say, unusual meetings to have with the Chief Electoral Officer, the minister, officials from the Prime Minister's Office and the PCO meeting with Daniel Blaikie, an NDP MP, except that perhaps it's not a surprise, as Daniel Blaikie and the NDP were working hand in hand with the Liberals in drafting this bill, this elections bill that is really a pensions bill. It's even more unusual to see that there was a meeting involving the Chief Electoral Officer; staff from the Prime Minister's Office, the minister's office, the PCO and Elections Canada; and the national director of the NDP, Anne McGrath, specifically relating to the drafting of this elections bill that is really a pensions bill.
I can assure you that I had no such meetings with the Chief Electoral Officer. I've met with the Chief Electoral Officer. We've had courtesy meetings. We discussed his report on the 2019 and 2021 election. We've talked about the pilot project in Nunavut. We've talked about a number of issues in my capacity as the shadow minister for democratic reform, but I can assure you that I was not invited as the shadow minister for democratic reform to sit down with Minister LeBlanc, his officials, staff in the Prime Minister's Office, officials in the PCO and the Chief Electoral Officer in relation to the drafting of this bill. That invitation was not given to me. I am certain it was not given to Madame Gaudreau.
There we have it. There were at least two meetings involving the minister, the Prime Minister's staff, the Chief Electoral Officer, Daniel Blaikie from the NDP and the national director of the NDP. Jagmeet Singh acts as if he knew nothing about this pension grab, that it was all one big misunderstanding, but there was his critic Mr. Blaikie, along with the national director of the NDP, in the thick of it working hand in glove with the Prime Minister's Office and the minister's office.
These two meetings were with only the Chief Electoral Officer. There were clearly many more meetings between the Liberals and the NDP, because, after all, the first meeting with the Chief Electoral Officer with the two was on January 25. On January 27, Mr. Blaikie was quoted as saying that “a fair amount of work [was] done”, so obviously there were many meetings and communications prior to the meeting with the Chief Electoral Officer.
Canadians deserve to know what those communications were. How many meetings did the NDP have with the minister, the minister's staff and the Prime Minister's Office in drafting this bill. The bill includes a pension grab that is going to put taxpayers on the hook in the amount of tens of millions of dollars to pad the pockets of soon-to-be defeated Liberal and NDP MPs.
That is what this motion gets to. It gets to transparency, so that Canadians can have a clearer picture about what happened in the lead-up to the drafting of this pension bill.