Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I just wanted to reiterate that we absolutely support both pillars of the motions that were brought forward here. The seriousness of the situation in terms of making sure that there is appropriate bilingual translation of all documents is absolutely critical. It's fundamental, and it's foundational, not only to the work of this committee but to the work of all Canadians, as a bilingual country.
At the same time, I absolutely do take seriously the need for us to send a message to make sure that departments and ministries comply with our requests to make sure we see all the information that is unredacted. That was the original request that we made. We're serious about that.
I do think we're missing one step, which is sending a final letter to ministries and departments to make our intent clear to all ministries and departments. The intent of this committee is to send a report to the House of Commons underlining that certain fundamental rights of this committee have been breached.
What I would like to see, and what I think would give that letter additional force and meaning, is having unanimous support behind it and making sure we can say that, at every turn, at every step, the ministries and departments were informed of our intent, informed of our plan, and given every opportunity to comply with that request.
The reason I'm saying Monday.... I know it's a couple of days' difference, but it does two things. One, it gives 10 business days for the ministries to comply, which means that at that point they have absolutely no excuse. They know full well and with full knowledge that they were not in compliance with the request, that they were in breach of the request.
It also gives this committee an opportunity to sit, to view the request, to see which ministries actually did not comply and discuss the outcome of this final correspondence in open session for all to see.
I think that's what it does. It provides maximum accountability. It provides maximum transparency. It allows us to make that decision as a committee, and hopefully unanimously, to send a real, strong message to the House that such practices are unacceptable. I think there is unanimous support here.
I would like to give the ministries, as I said, 10 business days. The House is not sitting. We come back on Monday. We see what the results of that letter are. Then we make that decision unanimously as a committee. I think that would only highlight and emphasize the seriousness of the situation for all members of Parliament, for all committees and for the House of Commons.
Again, I want to recognize the flexibility—