Chair, you are perfectly right, and I will cease debating with members of that political party. And to calm Mr. Poilievre's fears that I may be attacking the Conservative Party, which I would not do, I'd like to give you a hypothetical situation.
In the country called Xanadu, there is a governing party that has been in place for a number of years called Winnie the Pooh, and there is an official opposition called Snoopy. And that official opposition, along with the cooperation of two other opposition parties--and I won't bother to give them names--defeats the government on a confidence vote and the government then goes to an election.
The official opposition party, Snoopy, has had senior advisers in the offices of the leader of the official opposition, the House leader of the official opposition, the whip of the House of the official opposition, and the deputy leader of the official opposition, and it also has had volunteers.
We go into an election in this country, Xanadu, a general federal election, because it's also a confederation like Canada, and it has ten provinces and three territories--and I won't give you the names of all of them because I don't want to belabour this. And on the 23rd, the Xanaduians, in their wisdom, decide to give the boot to the Winnie-the-Pooh Party and elect a minority government called Snoopy.
The leader of what used to be the official opposition party, but is now the governing party, albeit a minority, has pledged to bring in a cleanup of government, accountability, and so on. And ultimately, a few months down the road, it brings in a piece of legislation that claims to do this.
That legislation, if I read it correctly, does not deal with any individual who held a senior position in the political party, which used to be the official opposition called Snoopy but now forms the government. It does not, in fact, deal with those individuals at all.
This amendment, if applied to this country, Xanadu, only deals with people who were members of the transitional team, that is, between January 23, 2006, presuming it was the same election date, and whenever that new government's bill--and we'll call it Bill C-11, does that make you happy?--comes into force. But someone who was working in the office of the official opposition leader--who has now become the Prime Minister--until the 23rd and who left on the 23rd would not be covered by this.
Am I correct? I hope I'm not correct. I hope I'm wrong. I hope that you will be able to say that it will cover....