Thanks.
I was just trying to make that point. Instead of this committee being used for partisan purposes, we're actually seeking—and I think Mr. Van Kesteren is very sincere in his amendment—an outcome that we can all live with. Unlike the previous motion, as it stands, it appears, and many have said, that it's simply an attack on an individual party on a partisan basis. What this would do is transform this partisan motion into something that could actually turn into something better and have some justifiable public benefit at the end of it.
To make a recommendation to Elections Canada, it wouldn't be helpful to look at one individual—the party has been defined as an individual and it's also been defined as a political party; it doesn't help us to look at one party when what we really need to do is look at the scope of the problems that are faced by parties. That's political parties or individuals. And this amendment would allow us to do that, because it says that if we were to find...we could broaden the investigation to include others. That's what the words say.
Any party could hypothetically form a government.
I apologize, Mr. Chair, for my earlier comments, because I felt myself wanting to express these points, but I couldn't because I didn't have the floor at the time. But this is my opportunity to do so.
Any present party, and I say this with all sincerity, any party that doesn't currently exist but might be formed, could hypothetically form government. That includes the Bloc Québécois. It even includes the NDP, or it could be a coalition government, which would be unique to Canada, but it would be possible. The point here is that it's hypothetically possible. It's hypothetically possible that any party could form a government. What does that mean?
The implications of this are that it's hypothetically possible, according to the chair's ruling—and I've read your ruling very closely, Mr. Chair, a number of times, and this is why I'm pleased that I have an opportunity to indirectly address it—that any candidate for any party could hypothetically become a public office holder. So the recommendations we would be making to Elections Canada would apply to them as much as to anybody else.
We don't have to look at the historical examples in Canada and just limit our discussion to the two parties; we can move beyond that. In fact, Mr. Hubbard noted, when he spoke on this motion earlier this evening, that there were 1,000 candidates in the last election. So we must be prepared to make recommendations that could apply to any of those 1,000 candidates.
But what does that mean? That means these--