Madam Chair, Mr. Martin can add to my experience that I've appeared before parliamentary committees, including his, many times, and it was a learning experience.
Let me say that the one thing I learned at the AG's office is that in order to have credibility you need to have independence. When we started this office, that's where we started from. When I was interviewed for the job, that was my number one issue with the government: how will I get independence?
The government has taken a number of steps to go that route. Let me explain. I was appointed through an order in council. I'm not an administrative ombudsman. I'm a legislative ombudsman. My mandate comes through an act of Parliament so nobody can change my mandate. If they don't like what I'm doing, they can't change it. It has to come back to Parliament.
My budget, although included in the appropriations of the Department of Public Works, is really protected by Treasury Board. Public Works cannot change my budget. I do not report to the deputy minister at Public Works. He and I, equally, report to the Minister of Public Works.
Let me explain what that reporting to the Minister of Public Works means in practice. What that has meant this year is that at the end of this year, once our report was finalized, we gave him our report and we explained to him what was in it. He tabled it in Parliament and that was the end of it.