I won't be long. When Madame Faille first raised this, no one really knew exactly what road the honourable member was going to go down, but she's a respected member of this committee. She's never done anything that suggested actions that wouldn't be supported by all of us, so we said yes—and we usually do unless we have a reason not to. Then it kind of proceeded, and there was a little resistance. Then Madame Faille brought it back again. She's very tenacious. She brought it back again. Most of us, again, weren't focused on this; it wasn't a priority, but it was a concern she was following on behalf of some concerns that had been raised to her. So then we pushed a little more, and then finally we're told, “No, we can't give you that.”
If you recall, it would cost too much money to do all the transcripts, and suddenly it just started to look as if there were blockades put in front for some reason, out of nowhere. So we pushed past that and said, “Look, just give us the tapes, then.” We accept that we don't want to spend a lot of money, but we have a member who wants a piece of information that's relevant to an issue in front of us and we're going to support her in that.
Then we get into this stuff about, well, they can't give it to us now because there are privacy concerns. Okay, well, the last thing any of us wants to do is infringe on the rights of a Canadian citizen. What would be the logical step? We call in the parliamentary law clerk's office. Now, I'm not going to go into details of the advice we got, but I think it's fair, and suffice it to say that what he suggested to us was because he had meetings with their lawyers. At some point you have to pick a lawyer you're going to follow. He came to us, after having consulted with the others, and gave us a rationale as to why he didn't think the arguments stood the test.
I'm not a lawyer, so I'm not even going to enter the fray, but I have to decide who I'm going to follow. At the end of the day, the majority of the committee decided, based on the legal advice of the parliamentary law clerk's office, that we were entitled to all that information and there were no privacy issues per se.
Now we get this kind of letter, just ignoring our decision and saying, “We're going to do this, anyway.” I have to tell you, as one member peripheral to this issue, more and more I'm starting to wonder what you are hiding. What is the big deal that this department is prepared to block a legitimate decision of this committee to receive information? This stuff about privacy, there's nothing there beyond the members of the government saying it. We have all the information I think we need to stand by the decision we made.
Chair, we may be into a situation where they're in contempt of this committee. It's one thing to call you or to call the clerk and say, “We still have ongoing problems; we have to do something”, but to send us a letter that just basically says, “We really don't care what you've decided, we have made this decision, and therefore we will decide what information we're going to spoon-feed you. We're not necessarily going to give you all the information you asked for.” Suddenly we're getting a major federal case out of one member simply asking for information and the majority of us backing her up.