Mr. Speaker, it is customary around this place that a lot of information is plucked from different sources to be used for political purposes. I am aware of what the member for Saskatoon—Grasswood is speaking about. I am not aware of what the member for Winnipeg North is speaking about in The Hill Times because, frankly, I do not read The Hill Times.
I look at it this way. The majority of Canadians, represented in this place by a majority of parliamentarians, using their power and supremacy as MPs and as Parliament, have compelled the government to provide these documents in an unredacted form to allow for a proper investigation, not necessarily at committee, where things, as I said at the beginning of my speech, go to die. This borders on criminal activity, and those documents need to be given to the RCMP so a proper and thorough investigation is done to find out just how deep this corruption goes and how criminal this is.
That decision of Parliament, the majority of people, not The Hill Times, not The Globe and Mail and not the National Post but members of this place, determined that we want those documents. The Speaker has reaffirmed that decision and it is up to the government to provide them. We can end this tomorrow if those 11,000-plus documents in the Department of Justice, and probably tens of thousands more in other departments, are provided to Parliament, as was demanded.