Perfect.
As a parliamentarian, in my time on this committee, I'm growing increasingly dissatisfied with Parliament's role in national security. I think we are too deferential to the executive branch and to the national security agencies, and I'd like to see Parliament take a more robust role in this conversation.
If you compare that with the United States Congress, their House and Senate intelligence oversight committees are very actively involved in what the CIA is doing on a weekly basis.
You and Dr. Wark were talking about this need for a strategic plan, a Canadian national security strategy. In terms of Parliament's role, if you look at the statutes that govern the RCMP, that govern CSIS, and the way CSIS and CSE work together—because they're in two different wheelhouses—do you have any specific recommendations on what we can present to the Minister of Public Safety in the next big chapter and what particular statutes Parliament needs to look at and reform to bring us up to speed in the 21st century?