Thank you, Mr. Chair. It's certainly interesting to see Liberal members here at the committee doing victory laps after we just experienced such a catastrophic travel season.
Minister, far from the opposition or the media conflating the summer and winter travel seasons, it was you—when you brought together industry players in November—who declared you were confident that Canadians could have confidence that there would not be the same issues plaguing the system that we saw in the summer. The travel chaos had been managed, because you held a summit. We've learned from both the airports and the airlines this morning that, in fact, you gave no policy direction at that summit. It appears to have simply been a public relations exercise, so that you could say you were doing something.
You indicated that the government should do everything in its power to protect passengers. We learned today. We asked the question. We asked the Vancouver Airport Authority, “Did the minister call you? Has the minister called you since the middle of December?” The answer was no.
We asked the Montreal airport authority, “Has the minister called you since the middle of December?” The answer was no.
We asked the Toronto airport authority, “Has the minister called you since the middle of December?” The answer was no.
Most shockingly, the airlines also indicated—especially Sunwing—that they did not hear from you directly until January 5, which was more than two weeks after the catastrophic failure of that airline, when people were sleeping in hotel lobbies in a foreign country.
You waited until the passengers had been returned to Canada. You waited until the crisis had passed before you did the basic thing of picking up the phone and contacting the entities that had failed Canadians.
Accountability starts at the top. I would argue that you are passing the buck. You have not engaged with the industry directly. You might have left it to your officials, but between Christmas and New Year's we needed to see action from you, and we didn't see it.
In the United States, we saw U.S. transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg pick up the phone. He had Southwest Airlines hauled onto the carpet within 24 hours of their failure, and you were nowhere for over two weeks.
Given that, why did it take you until January 5 to do your job and talk to Sunwing Airlines to demand answers for Canadian travellers?