Given that I promised to be quiet, obviously I should apologize to you for not remaining quiet at this time and for going back on my word. However, I must do what I must do and take this opportunity to explain to the committee members how this is related to my disappointment about what is happening currently.
I am an independent member of Parliament and I was invited by the Conservative Party to join the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology, and that is what makes me most proud since having been sent as a member of Parliament to Ottawa.
Usually an independent member of Parliament is not a full-fledged committee member and I'm very aware that I am the beneficiary of an exception that was probably made out of some sort of sympathy. Allow me to say that even though I do not know why I was invited, I know full well why I accepted the invitation.
I accepted the invitation because after 35 years of experience in telecommunications and broadcasting, I became a member of Parliament and I knew that the Minister of Industry, Maxime Bernier, was going to take steps that would potentially reduce the disastrous impact of excessive, abusive, and above all capricious regulations established by not very honest people in the CRTC, that I had an opportunity to become familiar with.
The pride I had in participating in your debates, was that of showing you that after having worked for 35 years in the communications sector I could perhaps contribute to reducing the power held in Canada by a regulatory body, one that I lost all respect for a while ago.
During our recent hearings, we heard the Vice-Chair of the CRTC, Mr. Richard French, and you probably heard me ask him about the commonly held and inappropriate relations between members of the CRTC and the clients that they are responsible for supervising, regulating and monitoring on our behalf.
I was trying to get Mr. French to comment on the relations that existed not so long ago between certain CRTC commissioners and an extremely powerful organization in the cable and broadcasting sector in Quebec, Quebecor, Videotron, TVA, Mr. Péladeau's group. I tried to get him to comment on the fact that three years ago, all the CRTC members except one had attended an extremely luxurious gala that was held in Montreal by the TVA network. All the CRTC commissioners were celebrated, transported, dressed, lodged, and fed by the Videotron, Quebecor, TVA organization, for the Star Académie program's gala.
When some reporter friends of mine discovered this and published it, the CRTC members, who were embarrassed and ashamed, decided to provide retroactive expenditure accounts in order to create the impression that they had paid for their own participation in the Star Académie gala. They accounted for the rental of their suits, their hotel rooms, their airplane tickets, their meals and other amenities that some convention delegates sometimes receive from powerful people.
I was not trying to prove, through my questions, that Mr. French is a dishonest man. I was trying to show you—