What I meant earlier by my intervention was not to be snarky. I will say this: I think you're right. I think that we don't get enough questions from our own party to another member of the party. Ms. Kwan mentioned that there was one Liberal asking another Liberal a question, which was kind of a set-up. All parties do this. If you were in government, you'd be doing the same thing. It's a practice that's been going on for so long now.
Let me get to my point, which is the fact that you're right. If you look at every other Westminster system, there are so many backbenchers in the Conservative party, in government, that they ask pointed, nasty questions. We saw it; I saw it a few weeks ago; Ms. May saw the same thing, and it is healthy. Let's take a look at what Michael Chong proposed, which is an idea worth entertaining at this committee. That is to say, you take the power from the whips, because ultimately, when we talk about parties asking other parties questions and set-ups, I don't like them any more than anybody else, and I'm in government. I did it when I came in, in 2004. My question to Ms. Kwan is, are you now saying you want to take that power away from the whips, so the members can ask just by standing up?