Thank you. Very quickly, then, as fast as I possibly can.
A lot of the debate today has been based strictly on the numbers, on the populations of the different ridings. Also, we talked of how the debate is happening on a provincial level versus a pan-Canadian level. I want to focus on that.
We had a court decision, the Saskatchewan decision in 1991, that I think clearly illustrated that the problem of representation in Canada was not simply a numbers game, like it is in the United States, but about representing communities. I didn't hear that a lot today and I'm a little disappointed because of it. I want to hear more about how we, as MPs, can represent the communities across Canada, and how electoral reform can bring forward those communities. The beauty of our system is that it is truly non-partisan. We really should be focusing on that. I think we should try to get away from the inference that this is a partisan game, and talk about how we can better represent the populations. There are so many of them in Canada.
I want to ask you, as quickly as I possibly can, what is a community of interest?