This is the relevance here. If we're going to make a precedent by going after a former Liberal staffer for his use of House resources on a Twitter account, that would be seen as an unfair partisan witch hunt, unless we are going to actually look at misuse of time. Incidentally, this would actually undo the precedent of the previous Conservative government, which said that political staffers were exempt. People could be posting as digital trolls, bombing Wiki sites, posting anonymous blogs under other names—and we can trace these activities back to House of Commons IP addresses.
I recognize that there is no such thing as a friendly subamendment, but with all due respect to my colleague Mr. Pierre-Luc Dusseault, who thinks it's strictly about Facebook, I've been thinking for a long time about the whole role of the digital troll in partisan politics. I think we have to carry out a subamendment to the amendment again: Twitter accounts and Facebook and—