Thank you, Chair.
Thank you, Professor Pelletier, for being here. The discussion has been fascinating, but I now have more questions than answers after an hour of your presentation.
One of the questions--based on some of the conversation suggesting that perhaps there could be consequences to the government--was whether prorogation should be used indiscriminately, if I can use that term.
I go back to what you said at the outset, that there are really three basic roles of government. The primary one is to pass legislation. When you talk about putting limits on the limits of the consequences, if any of the consequences were to inhibit the government's ability to pass legislation, would that overstep the boundaries of the limits you say might be able to be enacted to...?