Thank you.
I have to say it's an enormous honour to be in the position of being a member of Parliament at this table and putting questions to one of my heroes of academia, and of political science, Dr. Russell. It's extraordinary and I'm grateful to you for being here in person and answering questions.
I also think that it's wonderful to have someone—and no offence—but you're sort of an éminence grise in the field and there is no “grise” about you at all. You've made us laugh, you've entertained us, but you've made it really clear what you think.
In the written submission you touched on something that you didn't mention verbally and I find it intriguing. To put it to you, I take it that there is an additional risk in what you term “a false majority” when, as you point out in your paper, Canada has “the world’s most centralized parliamentary democracy” and you go on to say “in a minority parliament there is likely to be a diminution of its officials’ capacity to interfere with parliamentary activities”—by which I suspect you mean the executive of the Prime Minister's Office.
I wonder if you want to comment on whether there is a benefit in constraining excesses of power.