Mr. Speaker, you heard it yourself. I have never seen anyone so totally out of touch on the issue. It is my colleagues in this party who are standing up now to speak. The member's colleagues are undermining our democratic institutions and our democratic process. They are the ones who are undermining the ability of our police to do their work. They are the ones who are taking the time of the House of Commons in order to debate an issue we have gone through over and over again.
The commission is an independent body and not a court of law. Any citizen has the right to appear before that commission and have his or heard case heard.
Now the member is telling me that he wanted the students to spray police. What a shameful suggestion for my colleague from the New Democratic Party to make in this House. It is obvious he is not serving the institution as well as he should be. Otherwise he would have stood up and said that he would not make any comments before the commission made its finding, that he would not comment before the commission had a chance to hear the cases and make its report to parliament. Frankly, the hon. member is out to lunch.