Mr. Chair, I would like to thank my colleague for her question.
We have a Ukrainian intern in my office right now, Oleksandr. Perhaps my colleague has one as well. There are a number of them here. We hope they will learn from what they see here. For all that we may bicker in the House, back and forth about a variety of things, we are a model of co-operation and democracy for people around the world.
In fact, my colleague and her colleagues across the way have had their own orange revolution recently in Canada, and we congratulate them on their success.
That is something from which we can learn. We may disagree on things, but there are the basic principles of democracy and the basic principles of people making the difference, people of all ages, and it does come from young people. I am clearly in the second half of my life. My colleague is clearly hardly into the first half of her life, and we do count on young people. We do count on younger members of Parliament to lead by example and we want to pass on that example to young people from places like Ukraine to follow our example. They have been at it longer than we have, but we have something to offer and I believe my colleague recognizes that.