Madam Speaker, I thank the hon. member for Nepean for his commentary, particularly on carbon capture and storage, which is another fake solution to climate change. My concern with this argument is that Parliament has the right to ask for documents. The Speaker has said we have the right to ask for those documents. We do not know that there is any criminality involved here. If it turns out that the documents we get cannot be used in a criminal investigation, so be it. The RCMP can decide, after it looks, there is nothing there, and we can move on. Nothing is violated in anybody's rights. Parliament has a right to ask for documents. Those documents should be produced.
I really hope that my friends on the other side will realize that we have had enough of this debate now. Can we please get back to the business of the House and do the work the people sent us here to do?
I ask the government to be transparent. When the House asks for documents, the government should give them all to us. If the documents cannot be used in a criminal prosecution, that is what it is. To my colleague, it is not an illegitimate process. It is not that it fails to be a proper legal process. It is just the right of the House to ask for documents.