Okay, thank you.
To your point, I think we did see a lot of that when Karen Vecchio was removed as chair of the status of women committee. You saw MPs from all parties—and the public, quite frankly—speaking out about the good work she had done, and you don't often see that displayed publicly, so the point was well taken.
Do you think that, as MPs, we have a responsibility to set the tone for the public? Some of this discourse is going to happen anyway, but do we have a responsibility to set the tone ourselves and set examples for the public?