What I would say to that, as I just answered, is that as long as the response to foreign interference is dictated or driven by foreign policy interests or partisan interests, communities like ours will continue to be marginalized and vulnerable and targeted.
Foreign interference, obviously, is not a partisan issue, and on this issue, particularly, we lost a loved member of our community who was a father, who was a brother, who was a friend, who was a leader. I would suggest, and I would like to emphasize, on all sides across the aisle, that for anybody to try to turn any element of this issue into a partisan issue is incredibly problematic, and it continues to promote this feeling among the community that we're being used as bargaining chips by political parties domestically, and internationally, in terms of geopolitics, we're being used back and forth between Canada and India.
Our political aspirations, our safety, our security and our dignity are paramount, and they should be the primary focus of everybody around the table, rather than trying to take partisan cheap shots against each other on both sides.