Thank you.
I take the last member's point of what we can and can't do in the House quite seriously.
I had prepared, before we moved to the 9:30 hold and then the drafting, a series of issues with the original NDP-4. A number of those revolved around dividends. Members around the table raised the issue of preferred shares, assumably taxable but treated more as a debt instrument than as a dividend payout. There were issues that would arise within a group of companies if dividends were put out by one company within that group but the wage subsidy was collected by another.
My greatest concern, which has already been raised by one of my colleagues, is that if we put forward legislation like this—which is drafted with incredible implications on the fly—we may not get the results we want, although there are other methods to get the results we want that may not be resolved in the next nine minutes.
Earlier this evening, we had an amendment presented to address a concern that I think was raised by Mr. McLean, and the intent of the motion was clarified by Mr. Poilievre. With regard to an extension of a time limit, the intention of the amendment was to not make funds available or to not allow the government to extend further benefits without having to come back to the House of Commons. At least, that was the concern, as I understood it, that was raised by our Conservative friends around the table. The effect was to stop the post-verification of the program, which is something that all of us, over the course of the last week, have discussed the importance of. So—