Of course, Mr. Chair. I'll be really brief.
The reality is that we have this very serious CRTC decision that has popped into the equation. The Investment Canada Act will be a priority and will get studied--so will the other things. But we can't ignore what the CRTC's decision has done. It has re-scoped Canada's Internet capabilities and the relationship with customers and businesses. It's quite significant.
I think we need to give the minister the proper support necessary to hopefully overturn this decision. If not, you will have net neutrality and throttling. The Internet will also become very expensive for small and medium-sized businesses and consumers. So I don't think it's inappropriate to get this week and a half devoted to the CRTC.
Once again, it's all about compromise, because this hasn't been an issue. I congratulate the members from the Bloc for raising it. Charlie Angus, from my side, has been raising it for a number of months. Once again it's about compromise, and I think we have that compromise to function as a committee.
It's not everything I want, but at the same time it's nothing I can't be willing to do.