I've been sitting here for the past hour and a half as the proverbial sponge to take it all in. As I meandered my way through the arguments, I'm going to be quite honest with you, it was a fantastic discussion in many regards.
Mr. Christopherson brings up some really salient points about who we are and what we need to do, not only to represent our constituents but on our shoulders comes the responsibility of governing a nation as parliamentarians—not an executive, but as parliamentarians. We keep them in check, but by the same token, we also have given to us, thank goodness, by the sheer grace of this wonderful democracy, that we can put together a private member's bill to be understood by everybody and voted on by our peers and which eventually may or may not become the law of the land. Thank goodness for that.
Let me go to Mr. Graham's argument. There is a process in place by which the protection or the reputation of the Constitution is not held in contempt by anyone's private member's bill. At the core of it, some of that needs to be changed because it just might be too overly prescriptive in how we filter through these bills, who gets to go to the House and who does not.
The standard is set at a certain level. Maybe that standard should be—I know this is going to sound terrible—lowered to the point where we defer to the sheer respect of a member of Parliament to bring a law to this land.
Mr. Christopherson, I'm with you all the way, but this gentleman here has got a point about the system that exists right now. I'm going to have to defer to that, but in the future, I'm going to look at it with a closer eye and say maybe we're just being a little overly prescriptive in how we may be.... We're not allowing a member of Parliament to freely do their job, not as a partisan, not as an executive, but as a member of Parliament who has rights and privileges.
I'll leave it at that. Thank you.