Mr. Speaker, yes, we have had many debates in the House and elsewhere. I have asked him questions whenever I had the opportunity, perhaps every two months or so, to get to the bottom of this. We know all about the things he mentioned. However, the federal government's real strategy is to hide behind a voluntary investigation, a voluntary commission. The reality is that the government refused to investigate fully. For me, the question remains the same: What does the government have to hide?
Parliament took one position, and the government took another. The minister herself made a commitment on behalf of the government, but no concrete action has been taken. An independent public inquiry has not been launched. Canada could have been a model for the rest of the world. Canada could have gotten to the bottom of this matter, as it did with doping in the 1980s. It could have become a world leader on this, as it did with the World Anti-Doping Agency. Instead, Canada chose to lag behind.