It's one thing to compare the number of months, but it's another to compare circumstances when a prorogation occurs in the summer and Parliament returns at more or less the same time it would have. That makes a difference. It's wrong to claim that Parliament would have been hard at work during those six weeks.
You look at procedural issues from a highly theoretical standpoint, examining the differences between a prorogation, a throne speech and an economic statement. We are out there on the ground, however. We have our finger on the pulse of our communities, and it is our job to manage the situation and respond when seniors are in trouble, for example. Have you ever had occasion to do that?