Madam Speaker, it is interesting; members of the Liberal Party have taken great pains to politicize something that the Prime Minister initially said he did not want to politicize. That was the issue surrounding foreign interference, secrecy and getting top secret security clearance. At the Hogue inquiry, the Prime Minister even admitted to getting too political. I believe that was how he referred to it when he took the stand.
My colleague from King—Vaughan made a very interesting point. The Prime Minister does not actually have security clearance. It is interesting because many Liberals may not realize that. He is given access to top secret information because he is the leader of government. That is a constitutional tradition that our Parliament holds.
When it comes to the gag order, there are many different mechanisms; yesterday, my colleague, the member for Wellington—Halton Hills, expanded very specifically on what some of those measures are. If the Prime Minister were truly earnest about wanting to do what is best for Canadians, he would release the names. There are a number of mechanisms by which he could do so, but he refuses. He would rather play politics. He is playing with the security of Canadians and the interference of elections. That is shameful, and it puts our democracy at risk.