Mr. Speaker, the member has quite properly articulated the circumstance that exists from time to time and place to place across the country where ordinary Canadians have a gut feeling that something is just not right or fair in the administration of the law. They question the administration of the law. They believe they have been short-changed in their rights in some way. They feel they are not getting fair treatment in some way.
Their problem is that they face big government in trying to get redress. They only have the ability to speak to the people who have already turned them down or do not believe that they are being fairly treated. They have very few other places where they can turn.
It is a fact, some people do not like it, that there is a class of profession called lawyers, many of whom have the skills necessary to bring that challenge forward, to articulate it in a way and describe it and bring it forward procedurally to bring about a good result. That is what the court challenges program enabled many Canadians to do.