Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I would like to speak to this, especially after that intervention, which is rather unfortunate because the Conservatives actually talked themselves out of one meeting that they would have had earlier had they actually moved appropriately on this.
First of all, I want to acknowledge that what we're talking about here specifically, when you do the math, which has always been the Conservatives' mortal enemy, is there are actually nine business days as the difference here, because if we can't get the witnesses in the next four weeks, the time between that time period ending and when we resume our responsibilities back here in the House on the Monday is nine business days. That's what we're talking about as the difference here.
I think it's pretty rich to come here and then chastise us and the Bloc for agreeing to have a meeting to sit down with responsibility and in earnest to try to find a path forward like we promised. When we dealt with this issue last in Parliament, we promised that we would return to this once we got the reports, and we did so immediately. When I was contacted, I came over here right away. Just because the Conservatives are insisting on spending tens of thousands of dollars to have this nine business days in advance, and they are trying to chastise us and the Bloc for trying to make Parliament work, that's terribly unfortunate, especially given the fact that these members also filibustered days of this committee in the last Parliament. For all their sanctimony about having to get to this right away, we could have been doing this work in the last Parliament, but what we had in the last Parliament was the Conservatives filibustering on auto files and other things like that and chewing up this committee and chewing up other committees on a regular basis, and not just on an individual aspect here, but submitting multiple motions in multiple places and multiple times. They did so consistently.
If we want to talk about scandals, I've been around here long enough to see a lot of scandals. I could list a whole series of them here. There have been Liberal scandals on certain things, but there were also the Harper administration scandals on everything from electoral fraud to the whole series of different interventions when it came to Airbus and former prime minister Brian Mulroney. I could go on and on. We could speak to the relevance of all those different things, but at the same time we want to get to the subject matter here. That's why we sat down here.
The request that we have in front of us to have the two meetings in this time frame was a little bit optimistic in trying to guarantee that we can get two independent witnesses, that we can get prepared, that we can get the House of Commons resources to restart. At the same time, we're looking at basically a week and a half's difference of when it can take place.
I don't think it's very unreasonable, and I don't think the Bloc is playing games on this. I think they came to this meeting prepared to find a solution with an alternative. I've been in discussions with different people, and to be publicly chastised by the Conservatives to come here and then have them say we're in cahoots in trying to stop accountability is wrong for every single time we've agreed to have these meetings. I won't let that stand on the public record, because the public record shows that we've been pushing this issue even when I couldn't get the things that I wanted for the workers.
When we talk about the workers here, the Conservatives have not put forward anything on the whistle-blowers. When we had testimony the last time we were here, not a single one of the organizations even mentioned the families and the whistle-blowers. On that, I tried to work to get an amendment in the House of Commons on one of the official opposition day motions, but it was worded in a way that wouldn't allow for that. It was nobody's fault; it was just the way that it was, but we have families of these members. They just basically talk about the Liberals and the scandals and so forth and try to tar them with that, but what about all the workers who had to leave their jobs and had to sign non-disclosure clauses that still haven't been dealt with today? What about the workers who couldn't carry their pensions over and had to cash out? What about the workers who had to find different types of employment, and then the new system they have in place still didn't give them the ultimate protection that I want, which is full public service protection as whistle-blowers? We have all of those issues there.
Mr. Chair, I take offence to the characterization that this committee is not working. I take offence to the characterization that the NDP and the Bloc are playing games with this when we came here to do the proper work and do the right thing. Over a few business days, they want to cheapen this entire process, which is entirely significant. Even if we actually had those things take place and we did it within their time frame, do you know what would happen? We wouldn't be able to do anything as a committee until the House resumes anyway. There's very little that we can do with regard to this until the House resumes. We can't bring it to the chamber, and we can't do any of the things that are necessary. Now we have a chance to prepare, get ready and do something that is actually meaningful. I think it's unfortunate that they characterize us as they have. I guess what the Conservatives want is to go back to a dysfunctional House of Commons. On an issue right here, when you look at it, even the Liberals have voted consistently to actually have hearings on this. Yes, there have been differences about how we approach it, who gets to come at certain times and what the amount of time is, but they are on the record, as well, as looking at this issue.
To do that as we warm up to get back here in September to do the hard work that's necessary, and to poison the well right away when there are sincere efforts to do so, well, fine. They'll get their moment of glory, their clips and all of those things they want, but at the same time, they will not get what they want at committee unless they actually co-operate and try to make sure that things are going to be done with sincerity, because that's the history of this committee.
I'm sticking with it, when I go back, to make this place work. If they want to come here and use these types of cheap tactics and games for serious issues, shame on them. Just because they didn't get a few days of business time that they could actually have.... It is whining, complaining, sad and irresponsible, and it shows a lack of class for a party that's supposed to be saying it's going to be the next government.