Madam Speaker, like my colleague from St. Albert—Edmonton, it is troubling that we have to be here this evening on this subject. For Canadians watching, we are not talking about remediation agreements. We are talking about a constitutional crisis. We are talking about a crisis of leadership in this place and in this country. It is very concerning.
Across the country, on the editorial pages today, from many non-partisan sources, we heard great concern. We heard, in fact, from a former judge, who said, “It’s fair to say it’s a constitutional crisis.” From the former Liberal Ontario attorney general we heard, “It opens the door to prosecuting enemies of the government and giving immunity to friends, which is despotic.”
It is very disappointing that while we stand here and raise these very important issues, my colleagues across the way chuckle, snicker and laugh.
We are devoted to getting to the bottom of this very serious issue. The issue is the Prime Minister's coordinated campaign to undermine the rule of law and force the former attorney general to drop the criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin, to the benefit, as far as we can tell, of his friends, and to the protection of which jobs? It is his own job.
We have also heard from members opposite that it is about jobs. They should know that they can create jobs and an environment that is favourable for the creation jobs and that they can protect jobs without breaking the law.
The account related to us by the former attorney general last night was nothing short of shocking. Her account detailed 10 meetings, 10 phone calls, involving 11 senior government officials. It does not get any more senior than the Prime Minister, the chief of staff to the Prime Minister, the principal secretary to the Prime Minister and the Clerk of the Privy Council, to name a few. According to the former attorney general, the objective of these meetings was very clear. It was to influence her, bully her and convince her to stop the prosecution of SNC-Lavalin.
Not surprisingly, the Liberal members of the justice committee tried to paint her testimony as without merit because she did not quit cabinet right away. We have heard from members opposite that the system is still intact. The only reason the judiciary was protected is because of the integrity of the now former attorney general.
She said, “I resigned from cabinet because I did not have confidence to sit around the cabinet table. That's why I resigned.” However, that was not in her role as attorney general, because when she refused to do the bidding of the Prime Minister, we know that she was fired. She said that directly to the Prime Minister. The new Attorney General was given a mandate letter, and it had just three letters in it: SNC.
Luckily for Canadians, the former attorney general's testimony came with a clear and precise timeline. The events surrounding the criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin are very clear. I would like to go over some of the key dates, for the benefit of Canadians.
On September 4, the director of public prosecutions informed SNC-Lavalin that the trial would go ahead and there would be no deferred prosecution agreement. At that point, anyone would need lawful authority to stop that trial.
Yesterday, the former attorney general told us that lawful authority was not present. That began the months-long, unsolicited, coordinated and sustained attempts to stop the trial on corruption and bribery charges of that company.
A few days later, the chief of staff to the Minister of Finance, Ben Chin, contacted the chief of staff to the then attorney general. He said that if SNC-Lavalin did not get the deferred prosecution agreement, that it would move and that it was bad news because there was an election.
On September 11, that same chief of staff said to the former minister of justice's chief of staff that SNC-Lavalin was aware it was not receiving that DPA.
On September 16, Jessica Prince, the chief of staff to the former attorney general, received a call from Mathieu Bouchard and Elder Marques from the PMO. They told her that SNC-Lavalin made further submissions to the Crown and “there is some softening but not much.” They told her that SNC-Lavalin's board meeting was on September 20 and also mentioned the Quebec election. The former attorney general's chief of staff, Ms. Prince, told them that these concerns were bordering on interference in prosecutorial discretion.
As my colleague stated before, board meetings, share value, an election and a provincial election are not matters that can be considered in making a deferred prosecution agreement.
On September 17, the Prime Minister and the clerk met with the then attorney general to discuss the prosecution. The Prime Minister raised the issue immediately, and it was so inappropriate in the manner it was done that the former attorney general directly addressed the inappropriateness of the questions from the Prime Minister, but it did not end there.
On September 19, the former attorney general met with the Clerk of the Privy Council. He brought up job losses and that SNC-Lavalin's legal counsel was not a shrinking violet. Again, it is not a matter of public interest whether its legal counsel is a shrinking violet or not.
The attorney general then had to have a conversation with the finance minister, who wanted to browbeat her on the issue again. She told him that those engagements needed to stop, that those interventions needed to stop, and it went on and on.
It went on until December 19, and after a lunch between the Clerk of the Privy Council, Mr. Wernick, and the Prime Minister, the former attorney general received a phone call. The clerk said, “I think the Prime Minister is going to find a way to get it done, one way or another.” He said, “It is not good for a Prime Minister and his Attorney General to be at loggerheads.” She did not waiver. She did not allow that interference to occur.
On January 7, she received a phone call from the Prime Minister that she was being fired.
On January 11, the deputy minister was informed that the new Attorney General would be dealing with one issue before any other, which was the three-letter mandate he was given: SNC.
Canadians are rightly concerned with what has gone on at the highest levels of the Prime Minister's Office. We, at the justice committee and in the House have asked for the Prime Minister to appear. Those requests have been met with hisses, boos and laughter from the Liberal government.
The Prime Minister must appear and when he does, he must appear under oath and give Canadians a full airing of what has occurred.
Our leader has sent a letter informing the RCMP of our concerns and we hope there is an investigation. To restore confidence in government and independence of the judiciary, the Prime Minister should do the right thing and resign. Let us get under way with seeing what happened here.