I apologize. He has been a member of the House since 1988. No doubt he knows a large number of people because that is the way Parliament Hill works.
We want to know that the day he is defeated or retired from the House is not the day we find him back on Parliament Hill collecting an even bigger salary, working behind the scenes and currying influence from his friends. That is what we are trying to say. We want to discourage people from getting involved in the political process when they are no longer participating in the House.
A riding president, a member of the party executive have access to cabinet ministers, to the Prime Minister. If they do their jobs properly they win elections for cabinet ministers and the Prime Minister and for all the members of Parliament. They are volunteers. They work hard. We know the people in our constituency. No doubt that applies to every member in the House. Therefore constituency presidents and constituency executives have the inside track in contacting the people in power and we want to know if they are doing it.
Then of course there are those people who have money in their jeans and may feel that by giving a donation to a political party that brings their name to the attention of the member. No doubt the member is grateful for the contribution and some people may feel they can buy influence that way. All we are asking is that these things be brought out into the open.
Yet the Liberal government in its red book said it wanted to have an open and transparent policy on lobbyists. Now that the Liberals are on that side of the House they have changed their tune. We heard a quote earlier today by the member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell who in 1991 said: "What's wrong with a system that would disclose fees and major reimbursements?" Now as the whip for the government side is he supporting our motion? No.
The Liberals have this double speak system. When on they were on this side of the House they said this is patently unfair. They held their hands up in horror and said that it had to be changed. Now when they are on the other side of House only mild, ineffectual, little changes are all that they propose.
We ask that the remuneration paid to lobbyists be part of the list of disclosure requirements. That is not a big thing. We have found out that there are millions of dollars changing hands to buy influence in this country. We would like to think that is the type of stuff that only goes on in other countries that have a much lower parliamentary tradition than we have. I do not want to make disparaging remarks about other countries so I will not name them. We know there are countries where bribery, money changing hands and currying influence is the order of the day and we want to ensure that in Canada that does not apply.
We want all Canadians to know that the system ensures that does not work. We ask that this bill require these contingency fees, if they are not a salary, which can be very large, be disclosed.
Again I go back to the Pearson International Airport fiasco where hundreds of millions of dollars are potentially being made or lost. Unfortunately it is the taxpayers who are going to lose and it is a small group of businessmen, including some Liberal people, who are going to win. All we want to know is who is getting paid what in this deal. It is not much to ask on behalf of the Canadian taxpayer who ends up paying, paying, paying and gets nothing, nothing, nothing.
We want to ensure openness, transparency, fairness. We want to ensure that the individual taxpayer who is paying the bill gets a fair shake. It is not much to ask but obviously beyond the capacity of this government to provide.
What else are we proposing? We are asking that anyone who receives funding from the government or a government agency discloses the fact, including the amount of that funding. Is the group itself doing the lobbying or has it hired a professional lobbyist? This is where we are paying government money to be lobbied to pay more government money. It has got to be the biggest insult of all to the taxpayer. The Liberal member from Wentworth has investigated some of these organizations and finds that by and large these groups exist to get more money out of government to pay their salaries so that they can come back and get more money out of government to pay their salaries. We are asking that this be made open.
I think this type of motion, which suggests we want to know whether government is paying people to try to get more money from it, should be out in the open. I cannot think of any real reason the government would be paying under that scenario. If it is happening, we want to know about it. As I understand, according to the member for Hamilton-Wentworth it is already happening.
The taxpayers are not aware of it. I am sure they would be lining up to get that kind of job, which would become self-serving and a continuing situation. They could go to the government and ask to be paid another $100,000 a year because they claim to represent x number of people. After receiving the money they could come back and ask what about next year, the year after, and the year after that. We are trying to stop that. We want to get it out in the open. These are the situations we are talking about.
I could go on and on. Let this government know they made a commitment through the red book. We expect they would live up to that.