Madam Chair, the Prime Minister would obviously never want to mislead Canadians on something as important as that. He subsequently said that he learned of those allegations surrounding—and this is where I agree with Mr. Cooper—the unacceptable circumstances involving Mr. Chong. He learned about those when they became public.
Again, it's a he-said-she-said scenario where I'm going to some extent by comments I've seen in the public space. I would draw Mr. Cooper's attention to the former national security adviser, Vincent Rigby, who was in that job for many of those critical months and who said that he himself had not seen what the advice was that had been sent to Privy Council.
Parsing who saw what piece of information when is interesting, and it makes a great episode of Matlock, Madam Chair, but I would think what's important is for the government to strengthen—