Mr. Speaker, I worked with the member for Langley on the public safety committee. He always struck me as a reasonable person, but he seems to have strayed from that roost, sadly.
I thought it was quite important for our prime minister to sign on to Kyoto because Kyoto was in serious trouble. My issue was that if we sign on to Kyoto, let us set goals that are realistic and achievable. Let us put in the economic instruments, the market signals, and the economic incentives so that we can reach the goal. That is the only flag that I had put up.
I thought the goals were stretched targets. Obviously, they were. It is one thing to sign a protocol; it is another thing to honour it. I think that we could have done a better job, frankly. That is my own personal view. I think it is probably shared by many on this side. However, to bring about these changes in behaviour takes a lot of time, and we were starting to make some progress in the latter part of our mandate. Could we have made more progress? Probably.
However, right now, you folks on the other side have formed the government. You have to take responsibility now. Frankly, I was very embarrassed by your minister when she was in Nairobi and started to make a partisan attack in front of an audience that did not--