Personally, I don't think Mr. Dechert's recommendation would be very fruitful. They gave this letter a lot of thought. I think every word and every phrase was very carefully chosen and probably agonized over, to tell you the truth, to minimize what constitutes an insult to the committee or to couch it in terms that we would find difficult condemning them for. But condemn them we should.
I see the reasoning in your perhaps not dealing with my motion today, because we've seen Conservatives filibuster committees and it's just an exercise in frustration, but so is bringing the minister before this committee.
I remember we did that with the Liberal justice minister after he completely shafted this committee. Let's just be realistic here. We had a firm commitment from that minister and that government that, yes, they were going to revamp the Access to Information Act and that he would in fact table legislation. Instead of tabling legislation, he tabled yet another discussion paper and recommended that this committee consult further.
We don't need any more consultation on this. Everybody knows what needs to be done. For 15 years they've known what changes need to take place. It's stalling, it's ragging the puck, it's a delaying tactic, it's trying to exhaust the energies of this committee so you'll simply drop it, put it on the too-hard-to-do pile, and move on to something nicer and more satisfying to deal with.
You can put my motion on hold, if you like. Well, I'm not sure. I think I have the right to insist that it be dealt with today, and I might still do that, but I can advise you that you are setting yourself up for a whole lot of hurt if you think you're going to get any satisfaction from dragging the minister in here. I think the time has come to express the profound frustration and disappointment of this committee in the House of Commons, in Parliament, and tell the world that you're disappointed in this minister and this government's unwillingness to live up to their campaign promises to the people of Canada.