In terms of enforcement, this is the same situation I explained before. It's the House, ultimately, that will have to decide what kinds of sanctions it wants to impose in the specific circumstances. It will have to analyze and decide. The Speaker himself is in no position to impose a sanction, specifically in a case where we're talking about harassment, for example, outside the parliamentary context. Anything that would be personal or happen outside of work would have to be considered by this committee.
Do we want to go that far in terms of dealing with these situations, or not? If you look at the code in England, it specifically excludes anything that deals with the conduct of a member in their private or personal lives. There's an exclusion right there saying that anything that's personal is not covered by their code of behaviour or code of conduct.