Okay. There's another point that I would like to hear more about from you. You were talking about possible legislative changes. My notes say that the House might declare that it would approve of a refusal by the Governor General to acquiesce to a request from the Prime Minister to prorogue when that request doesn't meet certain conditions or standards. Now, I may have added on that last little piece, because my notes don't continue so I'm trying to make sense of that sentence.
But I would like to hear you further on that, because we have had witnesses before us who have talked about how, either through Standing Orders or through legislation, the House could attempt to limit or set conditions whereby it would approve of a prime ministerial request for prorogation under certain circumstances, and if that request did not meet the circumstances, there could be disincentives.
We have also heard from other witnesses who have suggested that, should the House decide to put any kind of limits or make its views known in any way on the issue of the authority to request prorogation by a Prime Minister, the Speaker could inform the Governor General. Then, I'm assuming, that would fall into the situation you mentioned: that if the House did act in that way, the Governor General would have an arsenal for refusing.