Thank you very much, Chair.
I want to go back to how 54% could not prove deliverables were received. You and I had a brief conversation about this previously. As a former public servant, this is absurd to me, considering that the process of signing sections 32, 33 and 34 requires that you must receive the deliverables before payment is released. You must sign the section 33 before the payment is released in the section 34.
Similarly, my colleague mentioned that we've put forward a motion to try to get the money back. Since it's pretty evident here that in 54% of cases they could not prove that deliverables were received, I think it is a reasonable assumption that all of the work was not completed—all of the deliverables were not received—and therefore it would be reasonable to ask for the money back, and for many other reasons, but I think the greatest piece of evidence to ask for the money back lies within that.
In addition, in the last Parliament, I asked the previous Treasury Board president if she would make it an obligation to get the money back. She said she would. We have yet to see a single cent. In the committee of the whole last week, I asked the new President of the Treasury Board—actually, the fourth during my time in this shadow role—if he would make the commitment to the Canadian people to get the money back.
The motion passed, but given all of these lapses—the inability of the previous President of the Treasury Board to get the money back, the weak commitment of the current President of the Treasury Board to get the money back—and going back to your reference to the nuts and bolts, to the paperwork of the public servants themselves, it's astounding, as I said, that a section 33 would have been signed for a financial release in section 34 when 54% could not prove deliverables were received.
This is all leading to my question. In your opinion, at what point are ministers accountable for the funds going out? We have seen in testimony again and again with GC Strategies and procurement that the rules are not being enforced and followed, as you've indicated yourself, yet there seems to be no one who is ultimately accountable for this. It seems to me that the ministers, as my colleague has pointed out, who have been retained in this government and have been promoted in this government, are not even being held responsible for these funds. At what point do you believe ministers are accountable for these funds that are paid out, for which we can't even prove we received a deliverable?
Thank you.