Mr. Speaker, it is nice to know that rhetoric has not died. We have the king of rhetoric over here from Mississauga West. If he thinks this is laughable, I am sorry but it is not laughable. This is an attack on the very rights that we expect to enjoy in Canada, the freedom of speech, the freedom of association, the freedom of expression, all of which are being suppressed.
Let me get right to the point. The commission was set up to examine complaints against the RCMP. The commission has an excellent reputation. The three commissioners right now are doing their level best to do their job and I admire their tenacity but this is the wrong venue. The is the wrong venue to be taking a look at the political interference and connection that has been clearly established between the Prime Minister, the Prime Minister's office and the police of this country. That is what the question is.
This commission, with all its great reputation, does not have the ability or the resources to get to the bottom of the question. Why does he not admit that?