The Earl Jones Victims Committee has now met with the leaders of all four federal parties in their bid to get tougher laws against white collar crime.
On Wednesday they met with Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe.
He said that immediate changes can be made to laws in Canada, and presented the group with a six-point plan that would include ensuring victims of financial fraud don't pay taxes on income stolen from them, and eliminating the "one-sixth" rule, whereby non-violent criminals are eligible for parole after serving a small fraction of their sentence.
"If Harper is serious, on Monday September the 14th should come and I'll propose we'll put an end to that," said Duceppe. "It's easy to do and I think that will help those people."
Members of the committe were pleased with the meeting, and said the Bloc had more concrete details than any other party.
Spokesperson Joey Davis hopes that tougher laws can be passed with a minority government.
"Each party is on board for tougher sentencing and really cleaning up white collar crime in Canada," said Davis. "I think we're all sailing our ships in the same direction."
Parliament gets back to business in two weeks.