Madam Speaker, the hon. member's comment is somewhat surprising, since the Reform MPs are the only ones criticizing the administration of justice at the present time.
I have never criticized the justice system of any province, I was merely repeating the allegations by the Reform member who spoke before me, criticizing not only the administration of justice but the very decision of the judge who stepped down, more or less labelling him as incompetent because he waited so long before indicating that he ought to be disqualified.
I have not criticized the administration of justice. On the contrary, I believe that the provinces, all in all, do a very good job with what resources they have available. I am very pleased with what I see at first glance as far as the administration of justice is concerned, in Quebec at any rate.
As I have said, there is room for improvement. What the Reform Party wants, however, does not exist—a kind of machine you would load up with the facts, pull a handle, and out would come the result at the other end. That is not how things work in real life. There are cases where the facts have to be examined, legislation that has to be applied, there are no miracle solutions, and at the present time the legislation is good, overall, although there is room for improvement.
I will not go into specific cases, as they want me to, because that is not the role of a member of parliament.