Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Once again, Iet me point out two things.
First, in the last Parliament, this committee spent not one, not two, but dozens of meetings on this topic. We heard from many witnesses. We worked on a report. I certainly commend the work of all my former colleagues who, given the difficulty of the topic, worked in a spirit of collaboration to produce a report, which was then adopted by the committee. This very voluminous report, with hundreds of quotations from dozens of witnesses, was tabled in the House of Commons less than six months ago. Not much has changed since then.
I recall that, in November of last year, the member of Parliament for Leeds—Grenville—Thousand Islands and Rideau Lakes, a very honourable man, suggested that we have just one more session with witnesses to discuss this issue. Instead, we had dozens of additional sessions on technicalities. It seemed that, just because someone said “six” and someone else said “half a dozen”, there was a difference between the two and we need to look at it in detail. So the sessions went on and on.
We really exhausted the topic. A report was tabled in the House of Commons. I invite all my colleagues to read it. I read it carefully because I was on the committee that wrote it. I do not want to give the impression that all the credit goes to members of Parliament; we have to congratulate our analysts for all the good work they did under exceptional circumstances, to say the least.
I know my colleague the member for Barrie—Innisfil; he is a very honourable man. I know that he is sincere when he says that they just want to see what is new and that, if there is nothing, we will move on. I have heard that kind of talk before, and, as a result, we missed out on the opportunity to focus on issues that are much more relevant and where we're discussing the negative effects on Canadians. Instead of playing these games here in Ottawa, we want to get to work for our constituents in Quebec and Canada.
As a member of Parliament from Quebec, this is my first objective. The work of parliamentarians must focus on issues that are relevant and important to their constituents. We have the opportunity to do so. I am very concerned that, almost three years after we agreed to conduct this study on facial recognition technology, we are still missing the opportunity to do so. As I said, we will be playing games instead of doing things that really matter to Canadians.
I'm going to make a plea: I'm asking my colleagues to move on to something else that is actually relevant.
I also invite them to read the report and come back to the table to explain, with arguments, why they think conditions have changed or what new elements deserve our committee's attention. We should not waste time on this issue.
I hope my colleagues will consider my heartfelt plea. We need to move on to things that are much more important to Canadians.