I think we can do both.
One aspect of it, of course, is that the committee can make recommendations to Parliament about changing the members' code of conduct and set out some guidelines. You don't want a tax code of, “You shall not do this or this in this kind of situation,” but maybe some aspirational aspects of what we would want members to live up to. Allow the Board of Internal Economy to then try to operationalize that, and allow for members to pursue that.
The other aspect of it is that there has to be some notion of peer pressure from member to member in terms of how we comport ourselves and how we expect others to comport themselves.