The answer that you can give in a report is what the committee chooses to give. You can either say, yes, the government has met the requirement, or, no, the government hasn't, or the government presented the material in such a way that we can't assess whether it has or hasn't, or give us some more time and we'll be able to give you a good answer, or on first impression, and you can use the words prima facie...you can say prima facie, you have doubts about whether this is adequate.
If you really wanted to be nasty, which I can't imagine, you could say, “Is this all the information the government had on which it based its decision to go ahead with these bills?” Is that adequate information? If you don't feel that it's sufficient.... I mean, there are many, many, questions in this.
All I can say is I wish you luck in coming to a helpful decision. Again, I would just toot my own little project here. Really, I hope the committee can reach a consensus on how to avoid this problem in the future, or reduce the likelihood anyhow.