I will share with you that, a couple of months ago, MP Michael Barrett started a Facebook Live in which he called me and my colleague corrupt and released our email addresses, etc., which led to a whole bunch of hate coming towards me—people calling, people emailing me on social media, etc. However, there was this one lady, Peggy, who drove two hours to my constituency office, and she was very upset and was asking me why I was a corrupt individual, why I was shutting down committees, why I was not allowing investigations to happen and why I thought it was okay for us to do X, Y or Z.
I sat down with her. We had a conversation for about half an hour, and she gave me the biggest hug when she left. To me, that really proves a point. When I talk about the politics of agitation, it is that spreading or framing of an issue in a way that really does agitate people and makes them anxious. It adds an extra layer to whatever they are dealing with on a daily basis as it is, so I think that we as members of Parliament have a responsibility to be more fair in how we engage on social media.