Mr. Chair, I'm not sure I can support the amendment.
I would have a suggestion for alternative wording after a vote, but, with respect to my Liberal colleagues, these are pretty damning quotes when it says, “it was a request that I got from the minister's office”, and then later on when the commissioner is talking about what's going on in the world of handguns and the fact that they're trying to get legislation going and that this legislation is actually to help police.
My ultimate goal with this is not just to focus on the problem. I think we also need to look at solutions. I think part of the problem is the fact that our Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, in section 5(1), is far too vague and open to interpretation. It just reads that there should be a “Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, to hold office during pleasure, who, under the direction of the Minister, has control and management of the Force”. What does “under the direction of the Minister” mean? What direction is that? That's very open to interpretation. I think this will continually bring us back to this problem. There are provincial jurisdictions in Canada and there are jurisdictions around the world that have attached far greater specificity in their police acts as to what powers a minister has and what powers a police commissioner has, and those two shall never cross.
I hope that through this conversation we get clarification from the minister and the commissioner, and I think they do need to come as quickly as possible, but I also think we, as a committee, have a duty to Canadians to explore how we prevent this from happening in the future. Not exploring that question would be a dereliction of our duty to Canadians. We want to get to the bottom of this and find the truth but we also have to be solution-oriented.
I'll leave it at that, Mr. Chair.