You go before the committee. We just finished a major study, which included apparent and real conflicts of interest. We were told at a press conference that 20 of the committee's 23 recommendations, if not all of them, would be rejected by the Liberals, who now have a majority.
I keep coming back to the same issue. If we conduct investigations here or if we ask questions of witnesses, who make suggestions, and we prepare a report that is completely rejected because we don't control a committee that is intended to provide government oversight, how can that be ethical? We're going around in circles. We bring in witnesses, we hear their testimony, we make recommendations, but it's the government that's in power that ultimately rejects everything we say.
What can you do ultimately, particularly in terms of including the appearance of conflicts of interest in the act?