Yes, with great regret, let me tell you. But you have to deal with this stuff when it comes.
This whole notion that somebody else is redacting, somewhere else in government, documents that we're going to get is a problem. We've made it clear. We've gone to the wall. I've been through this a couple of times, up to and including threats to have it taken to the Supreme Court. This committee, as any committee, as Parliament, has the right to demand that documents be produced. Those documents cannot be redacted.
If we put something in the motion that we asked them to on our behalf, that's another matter. If they want to make suggestions that they think certain issues are not germane to our point and might violate someone's personal privacy, by all means make that recommendation. But it is never, never acceptable for a document to be requested by a parliamentary committee and for it to arrive redacted. That document, by the Constitution, is to show up here in its original form, all of it.