Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm quite perplexed, actually. I'm not sure why Mr. Genuis feels that we should be removing the RCMP commissioner from this list. Of course, as we're having this discussion, we can add witnesses and discuss the importance of these witnesses to the context of what exactly it is that we're studying.
To be clear, I do want to quote this article that I had referred to earlier, where it is said quite simply that an RCMP investigation is the only way to fully.... This is from.... I'm sorry.
It states:
According to letters tabled over the summer in the House of Commons and its public accounts committee, the order created significant consternation within the [Office of the Auditor General] and the RCMP.
The letters also reveal that neither the [Office of the Auditor General] nor the RCMP found evidence of criminal wrongdoing while looking into the SDTC.
On July 10, Hogan wrote House of Commons Clerk Eric Janse to inform him that she would not comply with the order because it could compromise her office’s work. She also noted that if the RCMP wants her files, it can obtain a production order to obtain them legally.
“I am not able to respond to the order at this time,” she wrote to Janse, arguing that the records she audited don’t belong to her office but to the government.
What I'm trying to say is that I think Mr. Genuis misunderstood what the point is that I'm trying to get at here, Chair, which is that the role of our committee is not to be a judiciary. It is not to dictate to the Auditor General or the RCMP how they should be conducting their work. The role of parliamentarians is not to dictate to these institutions that we have created to have that oversight. By doing so and by continuing down this road, we are abusing the power of Parliament. That is not correct. That is not fair.
My whole point of adding these two names—the Auditor General and the RCMP commissioner—is to make sure that we have the full context of what exactly is happening here. I've never gone fishing, Chair. I've never had fish in a barrel, and I'm sure Mr. Genuis probably hasn't either, based on his comments on lobsters on the Atlantic shore earlier, but what we're trying to do here is be responsible and be reasonable, and if we are going down this path, then let's have the full context and let's be effective and efficient in how we are conducting our business as parliamentarians.
It makes no sense to invite a minister who has nothing to do with this file. It makes no sense to exclude somebody who has clearly, on the record, had so much to say about exactly what it is we're trying to do and has had so much to say about a motion that was passed in Parliament that is a potential abuse of parliamentary powers to basically dictate to the RCMP how they should be doing their job and basically dictate to the Auditor General how she should be doing her job. If we want to continue down this path, then I think that both of those voices need to be at the table.
If Mr. Genuis wants to add an additional name, including the law clerk, as he has just proposed in his subamendment, then he should propose that as a separate amendment and add the name rather than replace a name. The fact that he is trying to replace a name I think tells a complete story in and of itself. Why is he trying to replace this name? Why is he wanting the RCMP commissioner to not come to this committee and to not talk about the potential abuses of power that the Conservatives are playing at here?
I really think that this should be a game of addition and not of subtraction, for sure. I've laid my points out very reasonably to say that Minister Guilbeault should not be invited here, because he has nothing to do with the issue. If it was an issue that involved him, sure, but this issue does not involve him.
Do we want the full context of exactly what is happening here? Yes. Then include the Auditor General. Include the RCMP commissioner. If Mr. Genuis wants to include the law clerk, sure, but why is he trying to replace the RCMP commissioner?
I obviously do not support this subamendment. I'm more than happy to support any additions that Mr. Genuis proposes for this list, but I will not be subtracting somebody who has relevant, contextual testimony to give to this committee about what exactly is happening in this instance when it is on record where the RCMP investigation is and it's on record how these independent offices feel about this Conservative motion, its implications to our democracy here in Canada and its overstepping and abuse of powers by certain parliamentarians.
Thanks, Chair.