Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to underscore the important historic nature of this hearing today. It was 60 years ago that Tommy Douglas, the first leader of the NDP and the father of Canadian medicare, helped to push through the House—in a minority Parliament—universal health care. Now we're back, 60 years later.
Tommy Douglas's intention was always to move from universal health care to universal pharmacare, because the reality is that every other developed country that has universal health care also has universal pharmacare, so this is a historic hearing.
I certainly want to thank the many organizations that have brought this into being: the Canadian Health Coalition, the Canadian Labour Congress, the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, the Council of Canadians and so many other groups that have been pushing for years for this start of universal pharmacare. It's a historic day.
I want to thank you, Mr. Chair, for giving us adequate notice. We've known about this motion of instruction to the House for weeks, of course. We knew because of your memo last week that we had a week and a half to prepare for today's hearing and to prepare amendments. I appreciate the minister being here.
I do note that my Conservative colleagues have not asked a question on the legislation yet. I hope they took the week and a half you gave them to read the legislation.
Mr. Chair, I would like, through you, to ask the Minister of Health the following questions about some of the clauses of the bill.
First off, clause 8 talks about a national formulary. How do you see this developing as a national formulary that is required—once we pass this bill, as you know—to be put into place one year from now?