Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank Mr. Arya and compliment him on bringing in this excellent motion.
Colleagues will know that for all the years I've been here, this issue has tended to be one of the biggest we encounter, the issue of Parliament exercising its right, through the Auditor General, to access information from the executive. Oftentimes, as in this case, the executive kind of forgets, and the government starts to think that the government is the top of the heap.
The reality is that it is Parliament. Committees are empowered with rights that are in the Constitution. It's part of our own check and balance that the executive is accountable to Parliament. When a deputy comes in and says to us as a committee that we can't have certain information, just flat out, without saying, “Hey, I'd like to go in camera, or we need to find a way, because there are security issues and it's sensitive”, we have a problem.
We're open to that kind of thing. We understand that. We can find ways and we've done it before, but when a government department comes into any committee, particularly the public accounts committee, the premier accountability and oversight committee of Parliament, and tells us that we can't have information, we have a problem. We have a huge problem.
We're working our way through on a couple of instant cases that are in front of us, and they will unfold, hopefully, as they need to, but to send out the message....
Again, I've been here long enough. We had to do this once before, around 10 years ago. If I can share, and I won't belabour this, in many cases the deputy's inclination is to say no because they're protecting the department and they're protecting the government. That's their job, and I get that, but it's up to Parliament to say no. In this case, the information rightfully belongs to Parliament, and you have to provide it.
What happens is that the legal department in the department attached to the deputy doesn't give the deputy the advice he needs, which is, “Deputy, you can't say that to a committee. That's not going to work. We have to work on this and find another way to get them that information.”
This is about saying to the parliamentary law clerk, “Please take the time to talk to the senior legal people in these departments to remind and advise them that when they advise their deputies, they need to keep in mind that Parliament is supreme.” This is a nice, gentle, very Canadian way to remind deputies, through their legal departments, that you cannot say no to a committee when it asks for information.
I'll conclude where I began. I want to thank Mr. Arya. In my opinion, he's proven to be an incredibly strong member of this committee. This is an excellent motion that goes a long way to ensuring that we meet the goals of our mandate.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.