Your time is up.
I just want to very quickly come back to your point. The question I think Mr. Richards was asking earlier is the taxpayer side. As we've conducted our studies on the call centres, we find out that the taxpayers are very concerned about the fact of what is viewed by some as poor service through our call centres. That obviously was one that we felt, even as a committee, was in the committee's interests. We wanted to study it. The second one that they chose to do was on asylum seekers—a very timely study. I commend the auditors for their choices in audits, because I think that's where the taxpayers really are.
The third one after call centres and asylum seekers was RCMP security—again, a very vital one given some of the attacks we've had where there have been deaths, so I thank the auditors.
I think I speak for our committee. We absolutely believe that you must remain independent, where you decide what those audits are to be. I think maybe from the perspective that we come from, as a committee, dealing also with public safety and national security—I've served as chair of that committee—we also know right from that committee that cybersecurity is maybe not the conversation amongst the average taxpayers, but I think all committee members on all sides understand. I think even when you pick up a paper or any type of media, you'll see that cybersecurity is an issue that we face today that we haven't thought about in the last 20 to 30 years. It is a massive concern.
I don't want our committee to get too far off here. It's not one government or a different government. This is the mechanism on how best to fund parliamentary officers, or what Mr. Leswick calls departments, like the Office of the Auditor General. This is what I think we need to consider a little more here.
Where are we, Madame Clerk?
We'll go back to Mr. Davidson, please.