Thank you, Mr. Brock, for the question.
I'd put it to you simply that no one is being ignored by me or by my department with respect to the conversation about community safety.
What I would underscore for you is that the conversation on bail reform started with a letter that came from the premiers to the Prime Minister after an FPT that occurred in October 2022. That letter had a very specific ask, and we added to that ask in terms of developing the legislation. To the one firearms offence listed there, we added another three.
You and I share the same province, the province of Ontario. Doug Ford's government and Doug Downey, as the AG, have been very complimentary in terms of what we've been doing and very supportive in terms of what we've been doing.
What I found unique about the situation is that we had the support behind that bill of all 13 leaders of the provinces and territories in this country, as well as all of the law enforcement community. That continued even as we saw it make its way through to the Senate. It's now in the Senate. David Eby's government continued to lobby for its quick passage even while it was being studied in the Senate.
I think it's important, in terms of the list you're mentioning, to also underscore—and you as a former prosecutor will know this—that when it comes to setting in place the structure and the architecture, that's the Criminal Code and that's for federal parliamentarians. When it comes to the administration of justice and things like bail enforcement, that's the responsibility of the provinces, pursuant to the administration of justice under the constitutional division of powers.
What we've seen is that we've put money in place, including $330 million for guns and gangs enforcement, that is helping provinces do exactly that. There's some complementarity there, but in terms of my willingness to explore other options for keeping communities safe, as a guy who represents a riding in Toronto that has seen violence, particularly on the TTC, I am committed to that. It is my fundamental duty to keep Canadians safe.
Bill C-48 goes in a direction that will do just that. It's an important piece of legislation that got all-party support, which is a good thing. I think there are more areas of collaboration, and I'm willing to collaborate in those areas.