Mr. Speaker, my colleague from Timmins—James Bay raised this point, but the member may be able to expand on it.
The big issue seems to be disclosure of information, and the government promised to be open and transparent. The Liberals should follow the advice they are given when they travel to all of these international meetings that the commissioner complained about. They should listen to Britain's representatives, who have come here several times to brief us. The British have legislated their reduction targets, and every five years they up the ante on them. They have appointed an independent commission that not only advises on how to meet those targets but provides an audit of how well they have done and reports it publicly.
Does my colleague think that this kind of disclosure would be useful in this chamber as well?