Mr. Speaker, last evening the Prime Minister looked Canadians in the eye and asked them to believe him this time.
In sworn testimony before the Gomery commission he told Canadians he did not know Mr. Boulay very well. Yet according to Mr. Boulay's wife, they were part of the family that the Prime Minister worked with on his 1993 campaign. They worked at his office. Following the election the Prime Minister joined 11 other campaign workers for an intimate brunch at the Boulay home. Of course, we know the Prime Minister wrote a highly personalized and even flirtatious letter to Mr. Boulay and his wife.
How can the Prime Minister with these glaring contradictions on the record expect Canadians to believe him?