Mr. Chairman, Mr. Lukiwski talks in terms of preventive action, and I think there's something fundamentally problematic with that notion in this context. It arises from the fact that members of Parliament are here and to a large extent operate independently of each other and have rights as members, if you like, such that the House cannot set rules down. It would constrain them in carrying out their duty as members of Parliament. For example, you should copy every letter you send to your whip or you should copy every phone call you make—these sorts of things I think would be inconsistent with the independence of a member of Parliament in carrying out his or her parliamentary duties.
In terms of introducing some regime to prevent that, it's kind of hard to imagine what that might be. It's a policing regime of a kind that might be—