I was hoping MP Khalid would be here, because I know my words will sway her.
However, in her absence, the purpose of this motion is.... Obviously, we've had new information, but there's also a lot of fog around that new information and how it came to be that an individual with a declared conflict of about $12 million of business with SDTC, the green slush fund, got through the appointments process with a great deal of speed and acceptance, was ultimately approved, and ended up, based on the information provided by the Auditor General subsequent to her report, with stated conflicts and about $35 million for projects handed out to companies that the chair had a conflict of interest with. There were nine directors who had a conflict of interest. In 82% of all the projects the Auditor General sampled, the directors had a conflict of interest.
To me, that's not representative of the green technology business; that's representative of a culture of entitlement and a culture of conflict. In fact, one director, Guy Ouimet, got enthusiastic about it and ended up having tens of millions of dollars for projects he had a conflict of interest on. They were brought back and approved by the fund, for which he was a board member. He was a government appointee. He admitted to the industry committee that he actually stayed in the room and voted for one of the projects himself, which was for $4 million to go to a company he had a financial interest in.
This process of how these continued appointments of people.... As MP Cooper said, it appeared that one of the qualifications—it's all I can see—required for being appointed to this board is to have a conflict. It's not that you don't have one, but that you do.
We need to see the “sausage making” behind this decision. Minister Bains, when he appeared, said he's responsible for appointments, but when the appointments came around and the performance of the appointments came around, he pointed to the PCO nine times in his testimony as the people who crafted the list, not him, although he admitted that he called some of them.
We've heard some interesting information today. It appears that the letter that was signed by the PCO and went to Minister Bains contained six names. Now, that's interesting, because the former president of the Liberal green slush fund, Leah Lawrence, said in her testimony that Minister Bains's office and the ADM who sat on the board from the industry department, ADM Noseworthy, told her to search for only two names.
We have this testimony that says the minister has the ability to pick off that list and vet them but tells the president to go after only two of the six we now know were presented. We also know from the testimony of the president that when she checked out the two, one of them said, “I have a conflict, so it's inappropriate for me,” and the other said, “I have a conflict, but it is appropriate for me.” That's the one who went forward, over the objections of the CEO, and whom Minister Bains recommended to cabinet.
Today, we've had PCO officials saying cabinet would know that people who are being appointed have a conflict of interest before they appoint them, yet they did it anyway. We ended up with this situation whereby $390 million, because of these Liberal appointments, went inappropriately outside of the terms of their funding by Parliament. In most of the cases—$330 million—it went to companies they had an interest in.
The only way we can get to the bottom, or at least to the next layer, of the intrigue of how taxpayer money was so abused is to actually get the documents my motion has asked for.
Just to be clear about what is in my motion, we're talking about the advice letter, the one that the PCO signs, from a committee that includes departmental officials and the Prime Minister's Office. They signed off on six names that went to the then industry minister, Minister Bains.
By the way, he was responsible for reducing cellphone bills. Ironically, he now works for Rogers, the most expensive cellphone company in the world.
He decided, clearly, through whatever vetting process he admitted in committee to having done, that out of that list, he wanted only two. He wanted only two conflicted people to be considered and vetted by the president. He then chose the one who was left standing when the other one withdrew. He didn't go back to the other four who were on the list that the PCO gave him.
Somebody—in his testimony he said that others were telling him to do this—told him that the one they wanted was Annette Verschuren. We have this massive PMO appointments secretariat that every appointment goes through. All the MPs here know this. All the Liberal staffers here know this. People like me, who have served in staff member roles in government, know the role played by PMO appointments. No appointment gets made without the vetting and approval of PMO appointments. The senior person in PMO appointments was referenced by PCO. In some cases, it's the Prime Minister who ultimately reviews that list to make sure that he himself is comfortable with it.
We have a clear line of responsibility for a chair who was hand-picked by the Prime Minister—his office—out of a list recommended by PCO, of somebody who, according to the Ethics Commissioner's report, says she was approached to be the chair. She didn't apply. According to the Ethics Commissioner's report, she was approached.
Now, she may have applied after the minister's office phoned her. She may have said, “Okay, I'll send my paperwork in through the site, meeting the technical requirements of this clear, open and transparent process.” However, at the end of the day, in the Ethics Commissioner's interview with her, she said it was the minister's office that approached her to be chair. That was the first time she had heard of it.
We have a lot of obfuscation and fudging going on. We have a lot of trying to bury the facts going on. I understand why they want to bury the facts, when $390 million of taxpayer money went missing. That is, to put it in perspective, almost 10 times more than the sponsorship scandal under the Liberal Chrétien government. That was $42 million. There was a public inquiry, and people went to jail as a result of that $42 million. The CFO from the industry department said that this was a bigger scandal than that, which is clear, yet government members are trying to downplay it: This is just the way business is. It's okay to appoint people with conflicts, and do you know what? They got out of the room.
Here's how it worked. Michael, Larry and I are on the SDTC board. Guess what happens? They disclose by testimony, by written testimony and verbal testimony, and by the Ethics Commissioner's report, at the beginning of the meeting that Michael, my fellow board member, has a conflict on this one, so he may or may not leave the room.
Michael chooses to leave the room. He goes out. Miraculously, when Michael comes back, the project that he has a conflict on gets approved.
Oh, look—Larry voted for Michael's project. Now Larry has a conflict, because it was declared at the beginning. Larry, out of the room.
Larry goes out of the room. Michael comes back in, and Michael and I approve Larry's project. Congratulations, Larry.
For 186 of the 226 projects that the Auditor General reviewed, 82%, these board members were conflicted. They didn't represent 82% of the green technology business, but they were using the board to further their own interests.
We need the minutes, the letter and the communications in order to clarify how this mess happened. I would urge all members, including government members—who I know believe in transparency, who I know are not happy with the fact that $390 million has been identified as conflicted, who I know want to get to the bottom of it and to the truth—to support this motion.