Mr. Speaker, what we have seen before with the current government, when there have been document production orders from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, is that the government has used things like invoking cabinet confidence to not release documents to the RCMP. The RCMP has been very clear that this is a fact in matters dealing with the current Prime Minister.
What the House has done here, though, is make a legally binding order of the government. Therefore, we have a solution to the problem the RCMP would eventually face when looking to get these records, and that is the government looking to obstruct it. However, we also have a legal order from the House of Commons to produce them. What is the legal basis on which the government thinks it can now just decide what the House of Commons can and cannot do? Does the Prime Minister know better than the majority of members democratically elected to the House of Commons?