Thank you very much.
Parliamentary Secretary Fillmore talked a little bit about the kind of perverse outcomes or unintended consequences that you can sometimes get by passing legislation. It seems to me that we've had a perverse outcome for a long time now. There is a fair bit of cross-party agreement that something wrong is happening in the case of bankruptcies where workers are losing their pensions. The failure to get a working coalition, if you'll excuse the term here, in Parliament to get legislation passed has meant that this wrong has persisted.
If we take the statements of people around the table at face value, that's not an intended consequence. You talked earlier about the moment that we're in. How long it has taken to get here has been part of our conversation.
I just want to give you an opportunity to speak to the kind of perverse and unintended consequence—I think people around this table anyway would want to say it's an unintended consequence—that people have been short-changed on their pensions in the case of bankruptcy and also about the moment that we're at, in this Parliament at this time, where there does seem to be a working majority that's willing to get something done.
Perhaps you could speak to that, please.