I would be broadly in favour of oversight over the entire national security and intelligence functions within the Government of Canada, which would include the law enforcement components as well. What we're seeing is that they all work as a group. When we have 17 organizations, some of which you'd think would have no national security role whatsoever, somebody has to have oversight over that.
I think that's absolutely critical, because most national security and intelligence activities are obviously top secret. Obviously they can't put all the information about what they're doing on their website. Because they are in the shadows, the only way you can make sure they conduct themselves in accordance with our expectations in a democratic society is to have confidence in the oversight, confidence that somebody is watching and keeping an eye on them, somebody who can keep the secrets but who can also blow the whistle when necessary.
I would suggest that it should be an officer of Parliament who has oversight and virtually unlimited powers of investigation, of her own initiative or in response to complaints, to deal with whistle-blowers and all that other sort of stuff over the entire apparatus. What's happened previously—and I think this is all part of the overarching discussion we're having on the green paper and everything else—is that, for example, the RCMP has been subject to one level of accountability, CSIS is subject to a different level of accountability, and CSE is subject to a different one, and I've no idea what's happening in some of these other departments. Nobody has a line of sight into the overall big picture other than perhaps the Minister of Public Safety, but even then, perhaps not. Somebody needs to be able to keep an eye on this.
The only way we can have confidence in it is by having confidence in the overseer. We have to trust that the overseer is acting on our behalf, because we, as citizens, can't have visibility into all of these things that really have to happen in the shadows. We're making a leap of faith, but we have to trust the supervisor.