Mr. Speaker, that was precisely the point. The problem is that the member is mixing performance with remuneration, and it is precisely that kind of interference with the courts that the bill is designed to avoid.
That is why this remuneration is described in an act of this parliament. It is to take it out of the hands of government. It is to take it away from this idea that if one does not perform as I suggest, as I the government want or as a member of parliament wants, we will change the remuneration. We will lower it. That is precisely what we have to avoid and what we have to protect if we want to have the kind of arm's length judiciary that this democracy needs.
Yes, Mr. Speaker, that member is on another planet in comparison to this member.