I came straight from the House and got here as quick as you humanly can. Anyway, I'm not blaming you, I'm just saying that should be clear. The House leaders or somebody should make it clear that, if anything, that's a moment when we all just stop everything, stay in the House in a non-partisan way, and reflect our constituents' respect for our veterans.
Having said that, if ever there was a meeting to be late for, it seems that this may be the one. As I read through this, I gathered there was a bit of a miscommunication in terms of what you thought you were going to talk about and what we thought. So I'm with Mr. Williams. I'm not sure where we go from here. I suspect we just decided to fill in the time, since you were already here, which is a shame, because we have a lot of work and not a lot of time.
The only thing I'll ask is this. You said you had some differences, so I'd like to expand a little on where you left off with Mr. Williams. That was a point we hit pretty hard. I can appreciate the dilemma you raised, and that's why I want to pursue it. It's an interesting point.
Here's how I see it, and you can tell me how you perhaps see it differently. Our discussion, led by Mr. Williams because of his experience, led us to believe that there ought to be a set of standardized accounting procedures that we, as Parliament, tell the sitting government. Regardless of what partisan stripe it is, these are the parameters by which the government will conduct its reporting of the accounts of the people of Canada.
It seemed to make sense to me that we found a standard. It's external. It didn't need to be, but it's one that we accept. We've said that is the standard we will stand by, so there you go. You were suggesting that you might have a different sense of allegiance in terms of where you go. I understand that, but I'd like to hear of it a little further, because the process is meant to deal with that specifically. It sounds like you're creating a problem that we haven't addressed.