Thank you, Mr. Turnbull.
Just very quickly, there are two things. One is that if Parliament would like to amend the original legislation to change the label applied to NSICOP from a committee of parliamentarians to a parliamentary committee, they should do that. That would be an easy fix for a semantic distinction, which I don't think, to be honest, is important.
NSICOP is a very special committee with very special resources. It's an all-party committee. It has a secretariat of around 10, all of whom have security clearances and considerable knowledge of the world of national security intelligence of a kind that is, again, to repeat myself, not available to ordinary parliamentary committees.
My view of NSICOP is that it has proven its worth over the last six years of reporting, but it still lacks a degree of trust by Parliament. Let's be honest about this. The government suggested, for example, that NSICOP could be the entity to study foreign interference problems. That was rejected initially by Parliament as not sufficient. The government also suggested that NSICOP could be the entity to study the question of security breaches and related issues with regard to the Winnipeg lab. That suggestion was not adopted by Parliament. I take that to mean that Parliament did not sufficiently trust NSICOP to perform those functions.
There is still, in the first six years of its existence, a trust factor that perhaps goes back to some of the original political opposition to NSICOP. That is why I fear that giving this broad security clearance availability to all members of Parliament, whether they sit on respective committees or not, would mean a fatal undermining of NSICOP as Parliament's key instrument for studying national security and intelligence issues and doing that in a rigorous and in-depth way that is unavailable to any other parliamentary committee.