My thoughts are very similar to Ms. Blaney's on this topic. It's unrealistic to imagine that in the next 25 minutes we will go through this volume of recommendations. There is certainly going to be some discussion, and without a doubt, there will be some suggestion of changes. What that will look like we won't know until we get into the discussion, but I cannot imagine that we would not require a meeting tomorrow.
Therefore, like Ms. Blaney, I feel that until we see what those discussions look like and see where things land in the end, it is very hard to settle on a final version of a draft report. It's entirely unrealistic to expect the opposition parties—or given the minority situation we're in, I suppose potentially the government could provide a dissenting report as well—to draft a report when we don't know what the discussions will look like, we don't know what the final recommendations will be and we won't know that until tomorrow afternoon.
I don't think it's realistic to expect us to have that in by the end of the day. Potentially, we could still be meeting at that point.