That's better than Tom, too, I guess.
I've worked on a number of ideas I've had, though not in the space of the Citizenship Act. I've found it to be a challenge to work within the confines of the process and I'm learning, of course, that the narrower you make your idea, first of all, the more likely it is that you can actually get something drafted. Even getting something drafted seems to be a bit of a challenge if you are overly ambitious and try to fix a number of things at once. Then, of course, there's always a question of whether it is or is not a money issue.
In my case, I've been dealing with something about RRIFs, and whether or not that's deferred income or tax if they.... I won't bore you with all of that right now.
While I'm relatively new to this process as a member of Parliament, some people—at least one at the officials' table—know that I served some time in government as a staffer when I was much younger and had a lot more hair. In my twenties, during the Mulroney government, I worked with the minister. Back then, you went around with your minister through the departments for—
