We're here to represent the fundamental principles of justice. Due process—I guess you could use that phrase of the United States. The fact that it may not make much difference practically on the ground, which may be the case, doesn't mean that it's a principled decision to make. In other words, it is reactive, in my respectful submission, to situational events. If you start with the premise that there's a constitutional right to bail, and you move from that premise to the presumption of innocence that overrides everything, then before you change that, before you put the onus on an accused person, there has to be a principled reason for it.
So we're not just here to change legislation, with respect, for practical reasons. There's a fundamental principle that has to be the rock that you build on.