Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to just take a minute before I start.
Mr. Lawrence just spoke. I think we all share a desire to return to the Canada that is governed by peace, order and good government. Those are the principles that we believe in.
What I find disappointing about this is that.... Indeed, I think the motion was brought in good faith and I have a tremendous amount of respect for Ms. Dancho. I think it does, in fact, lead to a lot of questions that a lot of us ask, such as how we got to where we are. How did this situation devolve in Ottawa?
I note the specific reference to the OPS and the OPP, who do not, by the way, fall under the purview of the federal government. I noticed those specific references.
I think everyone, certainly the citizens of Ottawa, want to know what happened and how systems failed them so that we have ended up where we are. There's no question about that. I think you'd have to be blind not to realize what is going on outside Parliament Hill.
If we think about the question of how we ended up here.... I note that in Ms. Dancho's motion there is no mention of the Emergencies Act, so now we are conflating these issues. We are bringing together the two issues of how we ended up in a situation in Ottawa and this now being the committee that is going to investigate and ask questions of the Emergencies Act. So it seems, from what we have heard from our friends opposite.
I guess the question is.... If we are starting to look into what brought us here, I think there are going to be a lot of difficult questions that need to be answered about how members of the opposition thought it appropriate and reasonable to engage with folks who were holding the city of Ottawa hostage and encouraging them. That appears not to be the purview of this committee right now and perhaps is not something that Ms. Dancho would like to explore through this conversation. I do think these are questions around which Canadians deserve answers.
There is a parliamentary process in place to investigate, understand, articulate and think about what has happened with the invocation of the Emergencies Act. There is a debate going on at the House of Commons as we speak. Some of our colleagues here will be speaking in that debate over the course of the next several days.
If we start to think about what we, as a public safety and national security committee can do, we can create the conditions, room and space required to ask and answer difficult questions. If we think that officials from the police service are going to come and speak to us in a public setting and provide us privileged information that they would not provide to the public in their public briefings during an ongoing operation, we are either sadly mistaken or incredibly naive.
If we are going to have these conversations—and I want to be very clear that I am fully supportive of having these conversations—then we should do this once live operations in the city of Ottawa are over, especially because this specific motion refers to the Ottawa Police Service and the OPP.
On a personal level, I think that if the operations in Ottawa are over, that's a perfectly reasonable time to start having conversations about what happened in Ottawa.
Let's be clear. If this conversation is about what is happening in Ottawa, then let's limit it to that and be clear about that. Let's not make it something that it isn't or let's be honest about what this actually is and let's have a debate about that.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.