Good. Thank you.
Those articles were in there. The RCMP commissioner referred to those.
The fact is, and I'll say it again, you want to know why we're asking again for the minister. The minister discloses, as he should, on his public disclosure documents, as a member of Parliament and as a cabinet minister, that he still owns shares.
The normal course of business if you were made the environment minister would be to sell shares in companies that have a potential, perceived or direct conflict of interest, and he did not do that. He still owns the shares. That company has received almost a quarter of the $1 billion this government has given to companies they own.
If you can't see that there's a blatant conflict of interest there, when the minister sat in cabinet as they gave another $750 million to the green slush fund, and he owns shares in the company that's received 25% of all the money, I think we need to ask some questions about that. That's why we've put this forward.