I have another question, and you may not be in a position to answer this, but it was mentioned in passing by some of the members who were asking you questions. The Speaker can hear and see certain things that are happening, either during debate or during QP, but not necessarily everything that's happening in the House. Therefore, there can be certain types of conduct that happen during the proceedings of the House that the Speaker, himself or herself, is not an ocular or a hearing witness to.
If it's brought to the Speaker's attention, the Speaker then speaks to the MP who's been identified, and then it's primarily, according to the honesty and integrity of that MP--if in fact he or she committed what's being alleged--to own up to it and withdraw it, apologize for it, or whatever.
I've been a witness in the nine and a half years that I've been here. In most cases when there has been a complaint made about the conduct of a particular MP, that MP has actually risen and apologized or has withdrawn the comment. But I have witnessed, on at least one occasion, when everybody has also witnessed it, that the MP in question refused to admit to the alleged misconduct. And the Speaker was basically stymied, notwithstanding the fact that there were members of that individual's own party who were clearly witnesses to what happened. Not one of those MPs stood to say, “I heard it. I saw it.”
So it's not just from party to party; it is within the party itself. When we talk about parties having to show their support to the Speaker, we mean that individual members have to have sufficient integrity and strength of character to be able to stand and say, “No, I'm sorry, I heard it”, even if it's their own colleague.
Do you see any means with which the Speaker can deal with that? Or the Speaker is just in a position of saying, “Well, it's been denied. I didn't see it. I didn't hear it. Therefore, the matter is closed.”