Chair, I found myself a little bit conflicted on that last point as well, because while I disagreed with your original ruling, which was an unprovoked, unsolicited ruling to allow this discussion to go ahead in the first place--it was a ruling you made without even having been asked to make it by any member of the committee. Despite my disagreement with that ruling, I actually agree with your second ruling to include Mr. van Kesteren's amendment. I detect that we're moving towards a consensus.
You have now accepted this motion as being in order, and should the committee find in their investigation similar ethical practices by other parties, the committee would broaden their investigation to include the study of these ethical practices and make recommendations to Elections Canada as to whether these ethical practices ought to be continued.
In order to discuss the ethical practices of other parties, and given that you have opened the door to that discussion by ruling this amendment in order, we have to ask ourselves, what are those ethical practices?
I have some examples here of some of the ethical practices about which we are speaking and about which the chair has authorized us to speak.
In the 2006 election, the Liberal Party had a candidate named Yvan Corriveau in Mégantic--L'Érable. On January 24, 2006, the Liberal Party made a transfer to Yvan Corriveau's local campaign for $4,950.
On January 24, 2006—