It's the responsibility of the people who have privilege—you folks, me—to create those opportunities, not to turn to those people and say, “Well, that burden is actually on you, so you have to make it happen.” Whenever we're assessing something, that's the way we have to look at it: where is the burden placed?
If the burden is placed on people who are already having difficulty participating, whether it's to become a member and run for a political party in an election or to have the right to vote, having that social justice lens makes things a lot more clear. For someone who is de-housed and is having difficulty in their everyday life, the policies we're talking about in any given election have a great impact on them. To say to that person that they have to, in all these different ways that are restrictive, determine their place of residence, and prove that and their identity, is an extraordinary burden on people who are seniors or students. Those are the people who I would imagine you're speaking of when you want to see more diversity in terms of being involved in Parliament.