Madam Speaker, it was great to be able to serve on the industry committee with the member. We are both New England Patriots fans, so we had some chats about that as well.
I think what is important here is that it is the will of Parliament to have these documents turned over to the RCMP, and then we will let the RCMP decide what to do with them. Once the papers are turned over, at that point I think it would be good for PROC to take a look at what next steps could happen. That is why we actually have a subamendment here today, to try to talk about getting more people on the list who would speak at PROC on how we could make better changes.
However, what is important, first and foremost, is that it is the will of Parliament, this institution we are standing in here, which means it is the will of Canadians, to have the government turn over those documents to the RCMP, and then let the RCMP decide what to do with them. We know the RCMP is already investigating. These papers, as I said in my speech, belong to the public. Everything within this institution belongs to the public. The government should turn these public documents over to the RCMP and let it decide.