Thank you, Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses. This has been a bit of a tour de force, in a way. There's a lot on the table.
I've been thinking most about what you said, Mr. Turner, particularly having read the Walrus article you published a year ago. I would recommend it to our committee members. I think it's a really interesting take on how all Canadians are, in some way, shape or form, complicit in the issue of climate change. It's not a battle to be won. It's the kind of issue that is ripe for incremental politics but that nonetheless presents a massive challenge to us. In essence, what I took from that piece was that we're all in it together.
I would ask you to give us your reflections on the Conservative Party's take on pollution pricing. My views are well known. I spoke for 10 minutes in the House a couple of weeks ago during our emergency debate. I'm on the record as decrying the dumbing-down of this debateāa tax on carbon being a tax on jobs and everything else. I'd like to hear your views on what needs to change in the political discourse, particularly as regards the Conservative Party's treatment of that pollution pricing issue.