Thank you.
I'm an immigrant. I came to this wonderful country 20 years back. Whenever I travel abroad and meet my family, relatives and friends in other countries, I always say that one of the things I am proud of is that Canada is corruption-free. With my knowledge of a lot of my colleagues in the House of Commons, I can say they are corruption-free. Unfortunately, though, your actions that I've been seeing lately are things I can't defend.
I can say the first instance was a mistake. I can also say the second instance was a mistake. However, 24 times are systemic. When we include 82% of your fellow board members, it's an insider's club.
Canadians trusted that the SDTC would be at arm's length from the Government of Canada when it was formed. The government made it arm's length so that it could get professionals to manage the taxpayers' funds ethically and productively, keeping the the decision-making away from the politicians. However, you and your board destroyed it.
I joined politics with three objectives. My third objective was to ensure that Canada remains at the forefront of the knowledge-based economy that's growing the world over. I was on the board of Invest Ottawa, where one of the major objectives was to promote knowledge-based industries in the city of Ottawa. When SDTC was first formed, I was very happy. Many of us were very happy that clean technology was getting the boost that is needed. However, in a few strokes, you and your fellow board members destroyed it. I'm very sorry to say that.
As I said earlier, one time is a mistake, but not 24 times. Even now, after reading the commissioner's report, do you think it was a technical mistake?
Let me go back. I looked up the difference between conflicts of interest and corruption. It's a very thin line. There are a lot of grey areas, but when a number of instances of conflict of interest happen in a short period of time and they happen among very few members, they go to the side of corruption.
Do you agree with that?