Mr. Speaker, I would love to agree with the parliamentary secretary, but the question I was asking earlier is as follows. Why did parliament give an opinion on the Canada Post issue when there had not yet been a strike vote and when no strike notice had been sent to Canada Post? Why did the Liberals vote overwhelmingly that these people were not be allowed to strike?
In the case of Radio-Canada, the lockout has been going on for weeks and they are putting pressure on these employees because within the 51% of those working full time, there is a group that is not part of the union. There is some pressure put on those people. In keeping them outside and in preventing people from Quebec, New-Brunswick and Atlantic Canada from getting their programs, they say that they do not want to interfere in the negotiations. If the parliamentary secretary and the government could promise that they would never again interfere in negotiations in Canada, except to send in a mediator, it would certainly be very nice to hear. But this is not what we are hearing. Now they do not want to interfere, when they usually do.