Thank you, Chair.
I'll speak in support of this amendment.
Colleagues, the situation we have in front of us today is the third time the CEO of a company that receives significant benefit from the Canadian government through tax incentives and direct contributions, as well as a regulatory environment that makes it difficult for new entrants to come into the market, has thumbed his nose at this committee.
I think what we are experiencing here is much like the service that Rogers provides to its customers, which we were going to investigate with the CEO today.
In my inbox—I'm sure in many of yours, as well, across party lines—I frequently receive complaints from our constituents specifically with regard to this company and its customer service. There's a feeling of helplessness and frustration. The behaviour of the CEO toward parliamentarians in a committee that has a mandate to oversee at least part of the regulations and the regulatory environment that it operates in is just....
They think we're stupid, colleagues. They really do.
Mr. Chair, I'll direct my comments, perhaps, to the GR and legal teams watching this from Rogers.
I cannot believe they did this. Did they really think there would be no consequence to telling us that their CEO couldn't come? Actually think about this. Those people actually said, “No, no. This committee doesn't matter.”
I want to be very clear to those people. There is a desire to ensure that there is competitiveness in this particular area. I have had concerns about this particular company since the government approved its merger with Shaw.
The CEO has just blown us off three times, like he blows off his consumers on a regular basis. I'll put it this way: It has been noticed, and it has been noticed by my party. Certainly, my colleagues and I are thinking about how we would approach the regulatory environment, should we at some point in the future form government.
Being blown off at the last minute by the CEO makes one want to reciprocate that behaviour, doesn't it? However, that's not how Parliament should function.
Mr. Perkins' amendment—and I'm talking to my colleagues from the Bloc and the NDP, particularly—says that if he doesn't come by this date, we are essentially going to admonish him in Parliament. That type of escalation, given that he's blown this committee off three times, I think is warranted at this point. This committee needs to send a message to Canadian consumers that we're on their side, not on the side of the CEO. We're done with this obfuscation.
I feel that if we don't accept that amendment today and we don't say we're prepared to escalate, we're essentially like Lucy holding the football with Charlie Brown. I appreciate that I'm aging myself with that reference, but that's really what we're doing here. We need to send a message to this company that we're done.
Again, Chair, through you to the GR and legal teams, I am done with this. I cannot believe they wasted my time today, and now we're wasting committee time because they did this to me. That says they don't respect me as a parliamentarian, and that's something I'll remember when they try to get meetings with us and come up to us at events and say, “Oh, hey, girl. How's it going? Haven't seen you in a while.” Well, I haven't seen them in a while.
If you don't have the ability to respect the committee's time by doing what we say, why should we respect you? It's the same transaction with its customers and it's the feeling of frustration that its customers have with this company as well.
I wanted to put that on the record, Chair. I want to ask my colleagues, particularly the NDP and the Bloc, to consider this amendment, because it is a justified escalation.
Here's my rationale. I fully expect the CEO to blow us off again. I don't have a lot of.... He will blow us off again, so we're going to have to spend more taxpayer dollars and more committee time moving Mr. Perkins' motion again in the future.
I would suggest that we send a strong message today and say we're done with them wasting our time.
This could have been an opportunity for the Rogers CEO to put a positive message forward, but here we are. It could have been. There was no intent to be hostile here. It was more like, “Why are you doing this?”
His blowing us off three times says he does not respect this committee; he does not respect Parliament, and, frankly, he does not respect the government, so why should we respect him? We have to infer motive at this point in time because of the actions of this man. It's unbelievable.
Please support this amendment.