The new government of Canada has consistently and conspicuously increased resources to the RCMP. I won't take the committee's time to go through all of that. We recount those numbers regularly. I think it shows again the element of confidence, Mr. Chairman. People will use different things to try to misinterpret confidence in the RCMP. Sometimes it's the smallest things.
With respect to the memorial here on Parliament Hill, where a reporter for the Globe and Mail, Jeff Sallot, said that I didn't shake hands with a commissioner and therefore we didn't have confidence in him, when in fact it wasn't true.... I even tried to correct the record, actually, by sending a letter to the editor on that fact, and the Globe and Mail, uncharacteristically, wouldn't even allow me to publish it.
There are many signals that can go out that can serve to undermine the government's confidence in the RCMP. It can be small signals like that one or big ones like proper resourcing. That's why we've indicated we want to increase by 1,000 personnel the number of RCMP across the country. We've already, in our first budget, put $161 million to do that--$37 million to increase the training facilities at the RCMP National Training Academy Depot. We're taking a number of steps to show...whether it's small items, like shaking the hands of the brave men and women across this country who participate in what I believe is the finest federal police force in Canada, or large items, like making significant budgetary commitments to making sure the RCMP has all the resources it needs to do its job of keeping our country safe and secure.