Thank you, Mr. Chair, and I'd like to welcome some of the colleagues across the aisle. It's good to see them in the natural resources committee. I had the pleasure of working with them on a couple of other committees, which was great.
Just as a reference, first of all, I'm going to be short. It's not going to be more than five minutes on the last two points I wanted to get through.
I'm clearly trying to state that this is not about what was perceived at the end of the last session to be a filibuster.
For the sake of some of the new members, there was a motion brought forward by Mr. Simard, and I made an amendment. It read as follows: “and have the Government of Canada provide a response to this report”—i.e., the Trans Mountain report—“pursuant to Standing Order 109”, which basically, first of all, forces the government to respond, so the government has to respond within 120 days. Then we will be in a position to have all the facts in support of this motion when it comes to a motion for concurrence in the House.
I had also committed, when I got up and intervened on that, that I will be in a strong position to be able to have answers to lots of questions that seem to be very relevant. I was hoping to be able to get, as part of the government response, the number of changes that we had, the process, what the risks were, how the risks were mitigated and the mix on the financing model, etc.
That really dealt with the accountability. I hope I made my case that going into the House ahead of a report and only having a focus on a very small piece of testimony that was provided by the PBO will not put this and us in a position to have a very substantive conversation within the spectrum of accountability. That was it. I just wanted to reiterate that.
Then I asked about the timing. That's where I'll be spending probably the next three or four minutes, and then I'll conclude.
Why not complete the report, and why not wait 120 days? What is the sense of urgency?
Again, if we go back and look at the sense of urgency, is there any information that the government is planning to divest of this national investment in the near future? We really need to have this debate. If we have this debate as part of the concurrence, which is for three hours, how is it going to change anything? If the sense was that we need to have this debate because the pipeline is about to be sold, or that there was not enough participation by various groups, or that there were other points, rather than the PBO saying that given the scope of his study and these criteria and these assumptions, if the investment is done today, there is a possibility for the government not to recover the investment.... The PBO also clarified that it's not that Canadians will lose money; Canadians are already making money.
I am also at a loss as to what the urgency is, and if the urgency is helping with the accountability, I would love to hear that. When I look at the runway that we have, had we dedicated the last session to getting the report drafted and then looking at it, we would be much more ahead.
I'll conclude by saying that on the accountability side, it would be strongly recommended that we adopt this motion, get the report done, get all the facts and get the response. Let's have that substantive conversation, because if you accept, we will have the concurrence no matter what, and hopefully it looks like the filibuster in the House would finish as well.
Then there's the other side of it. There's going to be an opposition day that we could look at.
On the timing I'm confused, and on the accountability I'm confused, but I yield the floor back to you, Mr. Chair.
Those are the points I wanted to make. Thank you for giving me the opportunity.