Very simply, when there was a competition for the Department of Health, my organization would get a request from the director general or the assistant deputy minister of that department to hold a competition. We would hold that competition following the procurement policy Mr. Christopherson referred to, and there was never, never any political involvement, except in a few cases.
I think I said that to this committee when I was here back when, and I said it at the Gomery commission. And I even found out at the Gomery commission that there were a few I wasn't even aware of.
Once that process was selected--and so you understand clearly, let's use Health Canada--Health Canada, with my organization and the committee members, never, never had any political input. So we qualified three agencies for Health Canada. What happened after they were qualified, the minister or PMO or PCO or whoever could have had input as to what those agencies were going to do for that department.
That's where there seems to be a misunderstanding. And I had the same problem at the Gomery commission, that when I say the political was not involved.... And maybe I should have stuck to the same word, “qualifying” versus “assigning work” or whatever. So to me, my statement I made here that the political system was never involved in qualifying an agency, never, except the one I quoted for Chrétien and the Paul Martin issue.... And if I recall, there was another one, but it doesn't come to mind.