Before the orders of the day were called,
Mr.
Mackenzie asked if it was not high time to
have the report of Commissioner Smith laid on
the table. Of course the House was aware that
individual members had seen many parties
from the North-West since the last conversation on the subject in the House; and that
various statements were in circulation, some of
them, he must say, not very complimentary of
the Government Commissioner. But whatever
course the Government might ultimately
determine to take, he thought it was extremely
desirable that this House should be in possession of all the information that their
own Commissioner now returned could give them, and
that this should not be put off from day to day
merely to suit the convenience of a Commissioner who went to visit his family. This
was
the excuse given by the Government for not
972 COMMONS DEBATES
April 12, 1870
laying the information before the House at an
earlier day. It was quite evident that there was
extreme anxiety, and very great irritability in
the public mind at present, and that irritability
and anxiety were likely to continue and possibly to increase, and find expression
in perhaps
a not very legitimate way, unless the House
and through the House the country, were
informed as fully as possible, of what the Government intended to do, and the steps
that had
been taken by the Commissioners. Until the
report of the Commissioners was laid before
the House, he did not intend to say anything
that would in any way embarrass the Government, or complicate any further an already
complicated state of affairs. But he did intend,
as soon as the House was in possession of the
papers, to take some steps to bring the whole
subject before the House.
Hon. Sir John A. Macdonald said the reason
why Mr. Smith's report was not before the
House, was that the Government had not yet
received it. The mission was a very important
one and of a delicate nature, and when Mr.
Smith arrived here, he was asked to make his
report. He was now busy in the preparation of
it. When in Red River Territory he was surrounded by circumstances of very great difficulty,
and he was obliged to ask him (Sir
John) to hand him back the letters he had
himself written, in order that he could prepare
a correct report. He (Mr. Smith) was unable to
keep with safety, as he thought, such papers
about him while in the Territory. He was now
preparing his Report, and he (Sir John)
expected to receive it every hour, and as soon
as it was received it would be submitted to the
House.
The matter was then dropped.