Mr. Speaker, the report contains a number of recommendations that all of us felt had a great deal of merit. There is a sense of frustration that when the work of the committee comes before the House, the government has already made a decision. I have asserted before and will continue to assert that the Prime Minister's Office likely got involved in the process and decided that the recommendations in the report are not good. We do not know what aspects of it the Prime Minister's Office does not necessarily like, but the report now has to go back to committee even though it and its 16 recommendations were passed by consensus. All one needs to do is to look at the makeup of the committee to see that there were Conservative members who were in support of the report.
For whatever reason, the Prime Minister has said no, go back to the drawing board. I wonder if the member might want to speculate as to why she believes the Prime Minister was not happy with the report.