I buy my kids those connect-the-dot books where you follow one number to the next. Anybody who has ever done those before knows that you flip the page and you can clearly see what the thing is, but little kids get the enjoyment of actually connecting all the dots and then realizing at the end what the picture is. It does baffle me that my Liberal colleagues have seen the events of the last six days and say clearly there is nothing untoward here, when every Canadian, many former attorneys general, and many law experts have told us that obstruction charges are brought with less evidence than what we've already seen in this, because the gravity of what we're talking about is so severe.
I appreciate my friends talking about their independence, talking about the need to reassure Canadians that everything is fine. The best way to do that would be in the most transparent manner possible. We clearly know that Ms. Wilson-Raybould should be invited to this committee to tell us her perspective, given the limitations that the Prime Minister's privilege puts upon her ability to speak, and the Liberals just voted against it.
Don't keep saying that you didn't when you just did.
You're entitled to all your own opinions but not your own facts. The facts of the matter are clear. We just offered to invite Ms. Wilson-Raybould to the committee and now we're back to this motion where the current Attorney General has already publicly said that he doesn't believe there's any evidence to allow an investigation, and has also said that he hasn't spoken to Ms. Wilson-Raybould at all or to anybody else who is involved in the allegations that have existed in the newspaper. This is, as one pundit has said, a “Bird Box” investigation. You're looking without looking by intention. Let's not place a blindfold on the committee and then say we're doing the good work of the public. Let's not put these limitations down and refuse the principal actors in this play and suggest that we're somehow doing our best due diligence. That's just not true. You can justify it however you want and pacify yourselves, but that's clearly not what's going on.
I came today with the clearest intentions of finding some space in-between what the Conservatives have proposed, the more exhaustive list frankly, which might actually have been more complete and satisfying, and what the Liberals have come forward with, without consultation, with a very limited list of witnesses, some of which have already told us they already think nothing untoward has happened, and then the potential of a very exhaustive study into some things that we already know, such as the sub judice rules. I can read the Speaker's ruling again if my friends would like me to, not as an attempt to delay justice, because when you delay justice, you deny justice. We at this committee know that better than most do.
It feels to me like every scandal I've ever watched. There's the incident itself and then there's the attempt to hide from any sort of responsibility, which is sometimes greater than the initial incursion, and Canadians don't stand for it. I know that none of my colleagues were here during the sponsorship scandal or any of those days, but the lines from the Liberals sitting at tables like this were that there was nothing to see there, that nothing untoward had happened, and that they believed the Prime Minister when he said that no money had gone to special interests in Quebec during sponsorship. And it just wasn't true. So it's disappointing. I know I'm not a standing and permanent member of this committee, but knowing the work that you've done, knowing Mr. Rankin's contribution, we came into this meeting with hopes. Those have now become a faint hope that next Tuesday in camera behind closed doors suddenly Liberals will believe that hearing from Jody Wilson-Raybould, hearing from Gerald Butts, and hearing from Mathieu Bouchard and others who met extensively with SNC-Lavalin to talk about criminal affairs will suddenly happen. I hope it does, but that hope has become much fainter today.
I will be opposing this motion because it doesn't do what I believe to be the job and responsibility of this committee, which is to work on behalf of Canadians to put some light on this sordid affair.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.