That is certainly my interpretation, and I can only conclude that since the election, the government has done a 180-degree turn on its desire to see access to information as part of an accountability package, which was promised. And I'm very disappointed about this, because I would have thought that this should go far beyond partisanship. It's going to affect governments of all stripes in the future.
I know that the committee, under our very able chairmanship, does have experience dealing with some of these very difficult issues and could come to a conclusion if we had a text on the table to deal with. Otherwise, we're going to be discussing philosophy for a very long period of time. And I've seen this in discussions in the WTO. It was so complex, but only when you had a text on the table could people focus on where you were going and make progress.
I want to commend you for the vigilant role you've taken over the years as commissioner in what I think is a very valuable aspect of any viable democracy, which is access to information. Openness and transparency are critical to good governance, and we see so many countries in the world where you do not have that, and consequently governance gets in the way of all sorts of good things, including investment and prosperity.
So I hope we can clear up your role very quickly, and I hope you will continue to do everything you possibly can to ensure that we get a text-based act of Parliament from this government tabled at the earliest opportunity. I can assure Canadians that we will work diligently as a committee to make those tough decisions.