Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'd like to welcome our guests.
First of all, so you don't waste any time asking me whether I'm a lawyer, I'll tell you that I'm not a lawyer.
of common law. It's just that I work on common sense. Common sense prevails.
I'd like to ask a question. Appendix A contains the letter that was sent to Justice Minister Vic Toews. I don't want to waste too much time with the other witness. I believe he's on the side of the Conservatives, who want to abolish all the programs, abolish the Court Challenges Program—we'll talk about that a little later—and abolish the women's rights promotion programs. That makes me think of the American system. I'm so glad to live in Canada, when I think of the great system we had until quite recently and that I wouldn't want to lose for good.
Let's see the people who signed. If I'm not mistaken, 238 people signed a letter to tell the minister that they thought he was headed in the wrong direction. Even Simon Fraser University supports you. Even the university professors signed the letter, and yet Mr. Carpay says he has the support of all the universities we're talking about.
If I understand your mandate correctly, you've been given the objective of gathering all that together. I can't imagine a professor at the University of Ottawa going to Manitoba to consult people and see what they need. I can't imagine a professor from the University Moncton going to Newfoundland or Fredericton. That's not his mandate. His mandate is to be at the university teaching our young people. That's his mandate.
What did the governments give your commission? They gave you the power to go and see citizens. In a democracy, a minority government can't pass laws and regulations and take things away from us without people having a right to say something. Democracy isn't that.
I've travelled in other countries. Some governments even asked us how to go about doing things. Even the government of South Africa asked us last month what it could do to reach the people, to involve the people. When I was elected member, it was to represent the people. If we don't want to listen to the people anymore, if the government no longer wants anyone to help it listen to the people, I think it's making a fundamental mistake and that, at that point, we're headed toward dictatorship. If we don't have a counterweight somewhere, if we can't discuss differences, opposing views in public so that we are able to get the best, I think we're making a mistake and that this government is mistaken. It should remember that it's a minority. It doesn't represent the majority of Canadians.
If we were to vote today, what would the majority in Parliament think of all this? You wouldn't be leaving. You'd be here to represent Canadians. I'd like to have your opinion on my view of the matter.