Okay. I have a sense of how this is going to go, so let's go.
We've seen a lot of examples of CTV activism masquerading as journalism. I want to give you a couple of examples of that.
On May 29 this year, you published a story entitled, “Poilievre panned for video saying Canadians fleeing to Nicaragua”. Of course, this story was about the Leader of the Opposition talking to Canadians who are suffering after nine years of a government whose economic vandalism has made it all but impossible for millions of Canadians to survive here.
On April 2, just days later, RBC released a report on housing trends and affordability, entitled, “Toughest time ever to afford a home as soaring interest costs keep raising the bar”. Again, that details the results of nine years of life under the NDP-Liberals. We don't see that. We don't see a story. I don't have a story to offer you from CTV on that, which speaks to the experience that Mr. Poilievre related about those Canadians.
Of course, we have the most recent example of the blatant disinformation spread by your network. There was disinformation that was perpetrated against Canadians and spread across your platforms. Instead of the message Mr. Poilievre gave—which is what we hear from millions of Canadians—on the need for a carbon tax election when Canadians “can't afford to eat, heat or house themselves”, you altered it. You altered that quote from Mr. Poilievre into one that reflected talking points from Justin Trudeau's Prime Minister's Office. We wouldn't have known about that most recent case if you hadn't been called out by a Conservative staffer.
You said you're sorry, but we know you're only sorry you got caught. Isn't that right?