What I would feel more like saying is that, in the rest of Canada, they should draw more on Quebec's successes in this area. I think that what Madame said earlier regarding the communities, for example, shows that they are much less supported in the rest of Canada than Quebec. So if we have a highly developed collective system in Quebec, or, in any case, if the government recognizes and funds it, I believe that makes it possible to have better services and better policies for the population as a whole.
If you take, for example, all the measures we've discussed today, education, child care services and all that, we've long been in a coalition with the rest of the Canadian provinces as well. That's the case with child care services, for example. A number of people envied what we had in Quebec and also wanted the budgets coming from the federal government to be able to enable them to put similar measures in place. Moreover, as we saw earlier, the statistics of the National Council of Welfare show that it's better in Quebec, but that, in the rest of Canada, women heads of single-parent families are really in a situation of extreme poverty. So we think you really have to—There have been improvements in Quebec because we've been working on this for a long time and because funding and policies have been put in place, but the situation is much more critical in the rest of Canada, and poverty—