Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
This Liberal green slush fund scandal is massive. Four hundred million taxpayer dollars went out the door improperly, including $330 million involving 186 conflicts of interest among board members, and tens of millions of dollars funnelled directly into companies in which board members had interest. As we heard today, we have an assistant deputy minister who was the eyes and ears of the department sitting in on each of these meetings as money improperly went out the door, including instances of board members padding their own pockets and contravening the SDTC act.
What we also have are two ministers in Justin Trudeau's cabinet in hiding with a lot to answer for: environment minister Stephen Guilbeault and the ISED minister, François-Philippe Champagne.
This committee called on Minister Guilbeault to appear before it all the way back on June 6. It's now November 27 and Minister Guilbeault hasn't found the time to fit an appearance before this committee in his calendar. He is essentially thumbing his nose at this committee, at answering questions and at being accountable as minister.
Minister Guilbeault has a lot to answer for, because it was Minister Guilbeault who was a lobbyist for Cycle Capital and a close associate of Andrée-Lise Méthot, who is and was the CEO of Cycle Capital. She sat on the SDTC board when $10.4 million was funnelled illegally, in contravention of subsection 12(2) of the SDTC act, to companies in Cycle Capital's portfolio, in which Andrée-Lise Méthot had interest. This is a minister who lobbied, on behalf of Cycle Capital, the Prime Minister's Office 50 times, all the way up to the chief of staff. Minister Guilbeault is someone with interest in Cycle Capital who may have profited from the monies that improperly went out SDTC's door into Ms. Méthot's companies in Cycle Capital's portfolio. Minister Guilbeault sat around the cabinet table when it voted to approve 700 million taxpayer dollars going to this corrupt SDTC green slush fund.
Then there is Minister Champagne. It's been nearly two months since this committee invited Minister Champagne to appear before it. Minister Champagne, like Minister Guilbeault, is in hiding.
I have to say that Minister Champagne has an absolute responsibility to appear before this committee, because this green slush fund falls directly under the purview of his department. He is the minister responsible. It should be noted that many of the conflicts of interest and much of the corruption that took place at SDTC, which Minister Champagne is responsible for and must answer for by virtue of being minister, took place directly under Minister Champagne's watch, which provides that he has even more to answer for. It's not just that he inherited a mess in which things occurred before his time. Conflicts of interest, money improperly going out the door, self-dealing and corruption occurred directly under his watch as minister. Minister Champagne has a lot to answer for in terms of what appear to be his attempts to cover up the corruption, conflicts and mismanagement at SDTC.
Minister Champagne has repeatedly claimed that when he found out about the corruption and self-dealing, he took action. Well, how convenient, because all of this was happening while he was minister, and he did nothing until the whistle-blower was about to go public. Then, all of a sudden, when he realized that he had a scandal that was going to go public, Minister Champagne took an interest in the matter.
We know that RCGT was retained to undertake an independent fact-finding investigation. According to the whistle-blower, an interim report was prepared as far back as May 2023, with RCGT having been retained in March 2023.
According to the whistle-blower, much of what was in the interim RCGT report was damning. What was contained in that report ultimately has been confirmed by the Auditor General. Instead of seeing that the report be made public, according to the whistle-blower, the minister's office interfered in the release of that report.
In the whistle-blower's testimony before this committee on September 18, 2024, he said this with respect to the interim fact-finding report of RCGT:
All of this should have led to immediate action, but once those findings reached the Privy Council Office and the minister's office, everything changed. The investigation was delayed for another four months, allowing SDTC to continue misusing funds and mistreating employees, when at this point the federal government had in fact known this was true.
Minister Champagne needs to come to committee and needs to answer questions about that. Not only that, according to the whistle-blower, between May and when the RCGT report was finally released, Minister Champagne and his office were involved in tampering with and demanding material alterations to the RCGT report to water it down.
According to the whistle-blower, by late August or early September, there were discussions at ISED about firing the SDTC board and about firing the corrupt executives at SDTC, but suddenly, when the minister got wind of it, that changed. That didn't happen. We know that it was in fact what didn't happen, because when the RCGT report was issued in October, which was a damning report with much, if not all, of it supported by the Auditor General's later report—and by the way, the Auditor General found even more damning evidence in terms of what was going on at SDTC—the minister kept the board in place, including the corrupt and conflicted chair, Annette Verschuren.
For all of these reasons and more, we need to hear from Minister Champagne. These ministers, in this Justin Trudeau government, a government that really is defined by a culture of corruption and by a complete lack of transparency, need to be hauled before this committee, and they need to answer questions about what they knew about corruption and mismanagement at SDTC.
I would hope that members would support this motion so that we can hear from these ministers as soon as possible. It's time that they get out of hiding and come before the committee.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.