Well, it's more than that.
There are procedural rules about how you draft bills, so I can't draft as I would like to, cutting from whole cloth. You have to draft based on the bill you have in front of you, so you have to go where the procedural rules allow you to go. That doesn't always have us going to our preferred spot. But there are ways of doing it so as to enable it to happen.
But, Mr. Chairman, I wish to point out, since I think it is implied in the member's question, that I'm not crying fire here—or wolf, or whatever the expression is—but I feel duty bound on behalf of my client, which is the House of Commons, its committees, and the members of Parliament, to apprise them of what I see happening that they may not otherwise be aware of. This is what we've done by this report.
It's certainly up to the committee to choose whether it will do anything at all, or how much it will do, or whether it will do everything we're suggesting. That's entirely a matter within the committee's discretion. But I felt professionally and legally obliged to bring to your attention those matters that concern me as the legal adviser to the House and its committees and to members of Parliament.