Thank you, Ms. Demers, for your question.
The situation is really difficult. The system is fairly weak. It is very important to improve the tools they have, of course, but it's also a question of political will. At the present time, we don't know whether there is enough political will to ensure women's equality. In my opinion, it is really important that a commissioner be appointed.
The good work of this committee, and also of the expert panel on gender equality and accountability mechanisms, should be very closely followed. That committee looked at a range of aspects within the federal government in terms of how they were doing gender-based analysis and how to do it better.
One of the best ways to compel
politicians, people making the decision,
to follow the advice of gender-based analysis is to establish a legislative framework. We do it for the official bilingualism act. We actually have a legal framework in which these decisions get made.
I think if you want to establish an imperative,
if the analysis we are doing as a government is really crucial for those decisions,
I think it's very important that we lay it out in a legislative framework so that it's not optional, not dependent upon the deputy minister. I mean, I'm not confident it gets to the ministerial level, so let's look at deputy minister levels—les sous-ministres, tout ça. I think we need something that compels the analysis to be taken into account.
In our experience—in what I've read, in what I've heard, and I think in what other individuals, expert panels, committees, United Nations bodies have considered—a legal framework is incredibly important. Having someone at the Auditor General's office overseeing the work is quite useful.
Finally, one of the things the expert panel recommended was that one of the best indications of a government's commitment to gender equality and women's equality is whether or not it appears in the Speech from the Throne. They said the Speech from the Throne should be utilized as a mechanism through which we articulate our broader, visionary goals for women's equality. No Speech from the Throne in several years under numerous governments has taken that opportunity. I think the time is now.
My fear about an action plan is that it will become a bureaucratic exercise, that it won't have any teeth, that it may sound good on paper and may look like other action plans from around the world, but Status of Women Canada will be charged with this implementation in a way such that it isn't able to compel the decision-makers, the highest levels of government, to implement it.
Thank you for your question. It's very real.