Mr. Speaker, I was particularly interested when the hon. member talked about her role as a junior military officer. I want to thank her for her service to our country and the important work she did, in her words, as a bureaucrat, going through the bureaucracy and following the rules to the tee.
Based on that comment, I would like to give her a quote from the hon. member for Carleton, who said, “the decision on what to reveal,” with respect to documents, “is made by non-partisan public servants, for whom it has long been a tradition not to reveal cabinet confidences. That has been the case going back to all previous governments of all party stripes.”
Why was her work as a public servant good with respect to dealing with bureaucracy and why is she standing by while her other party members impugn the work of our non-partisan public service with respect to the redaction of documents?