I might add something else, Mr. Simms, that may help you with your thought here before we go on.
The chair doesn't do this very often, but as Mr. Christopherson said, it may involve eight to ten people, depending on the riding, but that would be eight to ten different polling stations across a riding. They don’t all vote at the same one. You're suggesting that poll supervisors could do it, but now we'd have to train 12 of them if they're all at different—
If I'm in the same riding as the leader, he and I may not share the same polling station.