Anyway, Mr. Chairman, we have the assurance of the Auditor General that this is being managed as best it can. We have the integrity of the government. This is a government, as you know, that has tried to keep a lid on many things. I'm reasonably confident that the Conservative government is not leaking this information.
Tomorrow we're going to find out what is fact and what is fiction. As you say, everything that has been leaked is not exactly as it's written in the report. I can't imagine why we're even meeting here today, Mr. Chairman, because surely if we were to call the meeting later on, if we find out what is fact and what is fiction, what is real and what is imagined, then we would have something to deal with. The Auditor General can't tell us what's in the report today. She has to respect her confidentiality. This feigned indignation by the Liberal Party seems to be quite out of character. Maybe they have new ideas now that they're in opposition that introspection is the way to go.
We'll see how it unfolds tomorrow. We look forward with great interest to what you have to say tomorrow, how Parliament has been kept in the dark by the Liberal government. You've alluded that there's going to be a special observation on that particular issue.
All of these things are now going to be wide out in the open, Mr. Chair; therefore, I think there's a lot more to be dealt with than the Auditor General's report, a lot more substance. Let's move on and deal with these issues, fix these issues, and save taxpayers' money, rather than go on some witch hunt here trying to find out about a leak that nobody can point the finger to.