Mr. Butt, when you leave here, if you have a hundredth of the positive reputation of Bob Rae, you've done well. I strongly suspect you're not going to make it.
I will continue wherever I can, as all of us will, to fight these unfair rules. I get where some of the government members are. They've never been anywhere except in government. They don't know what opposition is. Some of my other colleagues are a little more careful about what they're saying, because they know that we write down the things they've said before and that those can come back. I would just suggest that while it's nice and easy to feel comfortable in the confines of your majority government, the fact remains that eventually these members have to leave the Hill, and eventually they have to face Canadians and have to answer as to why they felt that secrecy was more important than transparency, because that's the issue. We've provided opportunities for things that reasonable-minded Canadians understand would be dealt with behind closed doors.
Mr. Lukiwski has raised an issue, and I have responded that unanimous consent would deal with that instantly without saying anything, but you can easily—