Mr. Speaker, this is an important debate for Canadians because it involves their money. This is not government money. This is the money of Canadians and we must never forget that because Canadians work hard for the dollars they trust us with and in this case they have been sadly let down.
In the final analysis, we in the opposition can do our very best in the most competent, able manner we know to hold the government to account but in a democracy the people do rule. The people, in the final analysis, will have to decide what messages they will send to their elected representatives, what pressure they intend to put on the government and what they intend to do in giving their support to the people they want to entrust with their money.
We know how effective people can be. We saw this recently when the government made an extremely ill-advised effort to give $20 million to professional hockey clubs. The public outrage was so strong that the government immediately backed down.
I would say to Canadians watching this debate that they need to make a judgment about what they will do, what they will say and what their attitude will be toward this situation.
The Liberals are saying that the opposition is exaggerating. Let me read from the audit report that was produced by the government. It is entitled “Program Integrity/Grants and Contributions”. The first part is a misnomer, I would say. The report is dated January 2000. I will read from page 7. I urge Canadians to get their hands on it and read it for themselves because I do not have time to read a lot of it.
Of the 459 project files reviewed, 15% did not contain an application. This is not the opposition making an exaggerated statement; this is the government's own audit.
Of the remaining applications, the following elements were missing: 72% were missing cash flow forecasts; 46% were missing the anticipated number of participants; 25% were missing a description of the activities to be supported; 25% were missing the characteristics of participants or the audience; 11% were missing a budget proposal; 11% were missing a description of expected results. There was no documentation on internal or external consultations in 70% of the project files reviewed. Two-thirds of the files reviewed did not contain an analysis or rationale for recommending or accepting the project. In 97% of the files reviewed, there was no evidence on file that sponsors had been checked for outstanding debts to HRDC prior to project acceptance. In 100% of the files there were no documented attempts made to identify debts outside of HRDC.
This is not an exaggeration by the opposition. This is the government's own document giving these horrendous numbers, proving government ineptitude and negligence of massive proportions in the handling of public money.
The Prime Minister is trying to say that only 37 projects are a problem. He said that 37 projects have some problems representing $30 million. Let me talk about the facts. The fact is that this audit was a representative sample of all the projects that spend $1 billion every year of taxpayers' and public money. If this is a representative sample, then it is not 37 projects that had some problems; it is projected upward to cover all the projects that were studied.
From the audit, the numbers show that in 100% of the cases there were no background checks done on what kind of money these people might have owed to the government. There are some other disturbing numbers too. In 87% of the cases there was no overseeing or supervision of how the money was spent. In 80% of the cases there was no financial checking. These numbers are so massive they cannot be exaggerated. One cannot exaggerate 100%.
Canadians need to know that the government not only is not acknowledging the scope of the problem, it is actually misleading them by trying to minimize it, by trying to bring those numbers down.
The minister has said she brought this forward because she wanted to be transparent. Let us look at the facts. The audit was done last summer. It is inconceivable that numbers like this, numbers in the 80%, 90% and 100% range, would not have rung alarm bells through the department right up to the minister's desk and the Prime Minister's office.
If that was not the case then clearly the government is not in charge. It does not know what is going on. It is in the dark. It really is not in charge of our affairs because it does not know of massive problems. That is inconceivable. That is unbelievable. That explanation insults the intelligence of Canadians.
The elected people who are in charge of these affairs did know and they chose to hide that in the House. Here are some quotes from the House.
After he was elected, the Prime Minister said on June 16, 1994, “There can be no substitute for responsibility at the top. I vow to you, to this House, to Canadians, that I will never abdicate that responsibility. I will never pass the buck”. What did he do? This is what he is saying when these scandalous numbers come out, “I didn't know”.
Then the former minister who is now the Minister for International Trade said on October 9, 1997 when there were allegations that there was an exchange of grants for contributions to the Liberal Party, “They have been approved by the department and are based on merit all the time, so much so that after I called the police in I asked my deputy minister, Mel Cappe, to review the whole process in which my department was proceeding”. This was in 1997. We were assured that everything was under review and everything was under control, no problem.
Then the present minister on November 4, 1999 said, “Mr. Speaker, let us be clear here. The appropriate approval process was undertaken in this regard. The department did the due diligence on the opportunities. The stakeholders reviewed the information and recommended investment. No moneys flowed until the approval process was complete”. This is when the government knew there were massive problems that could not even be exaggerated if one wanted to because the numbers are so bad.
We have to tell Canadians the truth about this matter. We need to do it clearly and they have to have the facts. I would say to Canadians listening to this that they need to make a judgment based on the facts. The facts are in the audit. The facts are as I have quoted. The facts were covered up.
My party requested this audit on January 17 when we found out about it and guess what happened two days later. The minister stepped forward two days later and said, “Because I want to be transparent, I am releasing this audit that was done last summer that I have known about for months because I am so honest and transparent”. She was hiding the fact that she knew very well that the truth was going to come out because we were going to get the facts and we were going to make them public if she did not.
This is unacceptable. Canadians have a right to expect that their money is going to be properly managed. They have a right to expect that there will be no hiding of the truth, no minimizing of the truth, that the government will step forward, be candid with them, have full disclosure and deal with the problem in an appropriate manner. That is not happening.
Canadians should be watching this debate. They should get the facts and they should make a judgment about the competence and trustworthiness of this government in managing their money, Canadians' money, and that is the fact we must never forget.
I move:
That the motion be amended by inserting after the words “express its” the word “deep”.