I want to take a second to circle back to one of the questions from the previous round, Madam Auditor General. It's with respect to files that have been ordered by the House, to be transmitted by the law clerk to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
That function, first of all, is important to highlight. The law clerk's role here is to serve as the conduit for those files and to make them travel. This isn't a direction to the Auditor General on what to audit. It's like any bill that comes through the House that receives majority support. The documents and data that were used by you to reach the conclusions you did with respect to the millions of dollars.... I think you said $319 million was involved in cases of conflict of interest. Some were declared and some were undeclared, but all of that money went to appointees' interests, to those involved with SDTC.
The only reason this step is necessary is that after nine years of the NDP-Liberal government, we have a complete absence of transparency—a refusal to be transparent with Canadians. It's not just files from the Auditor General. We need files from Sustainable Development Technology Canada and ISED. While we know the record-keeping at the Auditor General's office is excellent, we haven't seen that evidenced by the departments you've audited.
My question, Mr. Kennedy, is this: Are you collecting documents and preparing to transmit them to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police?