I think we need to be working across partisan lines as much as possible. There are private members' bills that the government has seen fit to support, regardless of partisan stripe. I don't think any one individual—or any party, for that matter—has a monopoly on how we keep our communities safe.
One of the reasons it's important for me to be here in front of this committee is not only to take questions but also to take advice, which then, in turn, may shape future government policy. That includes the matter of bail reform and the bail system.
I would say that one of the things I found most encouraging at the last federal-provincial-territorial was that there was a strong consensus that, yes, we should look at the bail system. That was true no matter which government was sitting within which party. There is a multipartisan effort here to get this right.