Mr. Speaker, in the public accounts committee, where we have been studying this issue, we had the deputy secretary to the cabinet of the Privy Council, which, as we know, is pretty much the Prime Minister's department. She told us that she was refusing to turn over the documents unredacted despite an order of Parliament because she insisted that the access to information law superseded the will of Parliament. In the same meeting, she told committee that she violated the Access to Information Act by destroying documents. This is right from the Prime Minister's own department.
Does my colleague believe what the Prime Minister's department believes, that the access to information law it violated supersedes the will of Parliament?