I think the facts are so clear in this case. I agree. It doesn't make a lot of sense to talk about this bill. It's an awful, terrible bill. I'm happy now, at this point, to take other types of questions.
It's true. The Conservatives said that the dental care program didn't exist, and we're about to hit a million people who've received care on the precipice of it. The last time I checked, a million people is a long way off from not existing.
In terms of pharmacare, just as we've been getting it done on dental care, we're going to do it on pharmacare. We have a lot of very interested provinces. We'll be signing deals.
I'll tell you why this is big. Take something like diabetes. Diabetes costs us $30 billion every single year, and it's going up every single year. People getting their medication matters. We have to be upstream. We have to be preventing, and—I'll bring it back to this bill—that includes preventing adverse outcomes that are entirely preventable. Vanessa's Law allows us to prevent people from getting sick by making sure that products that aren't safe are pulled from shelves.
Why on earth would we want people winding up in hospital from something that was entirely avoidable?