I'll address it from a rural Manitoba MP standpoint. I can actually say that we had rural Manitoba MPs of all political stripes work together after the first report came out, because the boundary commission in Manitoba was very tied to the principle that there needs to be recognition that populations stay within a 10% variance. That way, every riding is equal in the vote in the House.
We made the presentation that they should go beyond that variance, knowing that the act allows up to 25%, recognizing the fact that Ms. Ashton has a riding that is already 70%, geographically, of the province of Manitoba—or in excess of that, 72.5%.
We were prepared to balance that off and work with Ms. Ashton to ensure that didn't happen. The boundary commission took that under advisement.
However, what was surprising after we saw it—and this was the reason we made our submission—was the splitting of one first nation and the removal of the other first nation that was, for the last number of years, in Ms. Ashton's riding and should be returned. The big issue here is reconciliation and disenfranchisement, and to make sure that those individuals feel some continuity every time we do the boundary readjustment.