Thank you.
Mr. Fadden, when I started out I was a bureaucrat, and I know the majority of the people in the bureaucracy are fine people. I'm going to try not to be aggressive and confrontational, but I'm terribly frustrated with some of the attitudes I see when we, as members of Parliament, deal with the bureaucracy. The attitude is sometimes, at the very best, I guess, pejorative.
I asked Mr. Linklater the other day about racism within the department. I don't have a problem with bureaucrats making decisions--I think you probably have much more experience than we do--in consultation with parliamentarians, as long as you're going in the direction the government wants you to go. However, I think you know that I have dealt with racist attitudes with the east Indian desk. I brought it up in committee when Joe Volpe was the minister, and the then-deputy minister practically called me a liar.
Now we have a lawyer in Hamilton...and I'm sure you're aware of the article about someone who's obviously using government computers and has been on a chat line and made these kinds of comments.
What does the department do to be vigilant about racist attitudes? That's the only thing that really frightens me in all of this. That's the thing that frightens me the most.
I think it's very unfortunate. Yes, we all have our bad days, and I understand that people who work in the bureaucracy have their bad days as well, but when I call, I can't even get hold of a government person in New Delhi to discuss the circumstances in certain cases.
Where is my avenue, as a member of Parliament, to deal with cases where I truly believe there has been a mistake made when I have no person to talk to, I have a button to press? Can you assure me and tell me what we are doing to make sure that these ugly attitudes...? I don't want to be apologizing--I don't want my grandchildren to have to apologize in 70 years--for what we allow to happen here. I don't say this to be confrontational. It is a sincere concern of mine.