Mr. Speaker, that is the argument that the minister wants to bring into this debate. We have never thought along these lines. He should be speaking with his colleague from the Reform Party, his new constitutional colleague with whom he is working hand in hand. I invite him to have good discussions with him.
Earlier, I heard the leader of the Reform Party say that, according to them, this was an extension of a fundamental right. According to me, that is not the issue. The issue is the choice between a public system and a denominational system, and the people chose a public system. They have chosen it with a majority, they have expressed this in a consensus during two referendums, in a report by a commission, in provincial elections, and with everything else. According to me, this should be sufficient, and it is based on such support that, hopefully, a resolution should be unanimously adopted by this House to respect the will expressed by the people of Newfoundland.