I would just like to say to Mr. Godin that we're not the stupid ones. We have actually followed the employment bill study for over two years, and perhaps he should let Mr. Martin sit in that chair and decide which is the priority. But I thought the priority study was first and foremost and was most important. With regard to EI, we're not talking about EI legislation; we're talking about setting up a fund. So it's different from the poverty study. It can be part of it, and perhaps we can make some suggestions about how this fund is going to work.
But my idea of the poverty study is that it's going to be an in-depth study about poverty, about getting people back to becoming contributors to the economy and becoming contributors for their own well-being. I think they're two different topics, and I think we're missing the boat. I had hoped the poverty study would work so that we would get it through before the next election. It's taken over two years for the employability study. Have we even introduced it to the House yet? It's still not there on our anniversary.