I take your point. You're right that I should not say that everybody who's eligible is not vulnerable and that they're all very well off and living well. I should never have suggested that. It's a matter of gradations. If you ask what proportion of the population are eligible for EI, and you do that by age, you will find that the younger you are, the less likely you're going to be eligible. I have a chart in my notes about who gets EI by family income: the lower your family income, the less likely you are to get EI; those who work part-time are less likely to get EI; and if you have a lone parent with children, they are less likely to get EI. It's the same in all of those dimensions.
But you're right that I should never have suggested that somebody who's collected EI and exhausted their benefits, and who would benefit from the extra five weeks and be quite happy to get it, is therefore not vulnerable. No, but they're less likely to be vulnerable, I think, than the people who are excluded. I hope that's a fair comment.