Mr. Speaker, we have seen the Reform day care program.
We had many votes in this House where sometimes members did not vote with the government. There were many votes. I did not ask them to move to the other side.
I had some discipline. It happened to the former Reform whip who is sitting there, or he was yesterday, who has been changed because he disagreed. We have discipline in the party.
When there is a vote in the House of Commons and the question is: "Do you have confidence in this government?" and if you have no confidence in the government, that means that you are no longer a member of that party.
It has been a British tradition for 400 years. I have to tell the member of the third party that a vote of non-confidence in the government leads to what happened.
I have no lessons in democracy to learn from the Reform Party. Yesterday the leader of a party was recognized by the Speaker to ask one question and the Reform Party wanted him to shut up. That is the type of democracy they are preaching.