Mr. Speaker, I would first like to state for the record what a privilege it has been to work with my hon. colleague on the health committee and how I could not agree with her more when she states the fundamental obligation of opposition, and frankly all members of Parliament, is to hold a government accountable.
I want to state that, at its most basic, what this is about. Of course, there are facts and issues that every government prefers not to see the light of date because they do not suit its narrative, may show it has mishandled a situation or just make it look incompetent. That is precisely the work of opposition, to ferret those issues out so the Canadian public has a full view of the entire record of a government so they can cast a meaningful ballot during an election, which everybody in this country seems to think is going to happen in the fall.
I would like to ask my hon. colleague this. How important is it that the Canadian people get accurate information about what happened in the Winnipeg lab and how the current federal government has handled it in order for Canadians to cast a meaningful ballot at the next federal election?