Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Since Mr. Calandra doesn't think you should be commenting on what he has to say, I think I will for a moment.
It seems to me that all of us owe to our electors, whether they voted for us or not, a certain degree of respect. That respect includes that we as parliamentarians ought to do our jobs of holding government to account, and, particularly when the government will not provide us with the basic information required for us to assess what they're claiming in terms of their spending plans, I don't see how we can do that.
I'm appalled, Mr. Chairman, that Mr. Calandra, for example, suggests that his electors would accept the idea that the Parliamentary Budget Officer, acting on behalf of parliamentarians, can't get any information from the government, and that we as parliamentarians—all of us—would be voting on these things in spite of the fact that government will disclose no details.
Let me ask a few questions.
Mr. Page, do you have any idea what departments have done to achieve the savings they're projecting, if anything?