I'd like to speak to that one.
Something we've not really talked about is the role of the Integrity Commissioner. That's actually crucial in this system because this act is appalling bad as it is. It does actually give the Integrity Commissioner a fair bit of power. In fact it has all the power of the Inquiries Act. The reason we have almost no results from this act is that the Integrity Commissioner has a whole host of excuses that they can give to do nothing, and they have consistently done that. I'm not saying that these are bad people, although I question what Madam Ouimet was thinking about in her tenure.
The problem is that, when you appoint people who are socialized and brought up in the bureaucracy and who expect to go back to it in some sense, then you're putting them into an incredible conflict of interest. If this starts creating user bias for the minister, they're going totally against the whole ethos and set of values of the public service, of the norm.
We have an Integrity Commissioner who is basically viewed as part of the bureaucracy and who behaves like a bureaucrat—