Mr. Chair, you know that quite a few months ago we had this issue in front of us when I moved a motion asking for the restoration of gay rights and gay history in the citizenship guide at the next printing. I want to thank the committee for supporting the recommendations.
It then went to Parliament. We had a three-hour debate in the House of Commons on this. I was assured at that time that if I truly wanted to see this restoration in the next printing and if we wanted unanimous consent, which is what we had.... If you note the vote, it went on division, that we would leave the matter of what occurred in the past, whether it was an oversight or whether it was the minister or his staff who instructed people to pull this out.
At this point I'm more interested in seeing the wording restored. At that time I said I would support going forward. If that was the case it would not create division in the House of Commons. I was assured gay rights and gay history would be in the new edition. I'm going to honour that agreement, because we had a debate and at that time I was pushing my Conservative colleagues to say if we are continually divided on this matter it doesn't set a good example. What are new citizens supposed to do with a divided House of Commons? I was pleased that the vote was on division and it passed and that the new edition will have gay rights in there.
Through ATI requests from various journalists, I don't think it was an oversight. EGALE interpreted it as an oversight within the gay and lesbian community. Others said that it was a deliberate attempt to delete part of the history. Whichever way it is, it seems to me the ATI request from CP, I believe, shows there was some kind of intervention from the political staff. I'm not sure that we need to push this issue further, because if the minister ends up not giving us the information in ten days this will probably end up in the House of Commons, where we're going to have another debate on it, which I'm not sure is helpful.