Mr. Speaker, I know from the member's other speeches in this House that he is fully aware of this issue and is very well connected with it. He follows it closely. He advocates very strongly, and I appreciate that, but I want to pick up on one of the last sentences in his speech. In it, he said that he does not attempt to understand why the Prime Minister would be against it. However, he said so much about that previous to making that comment. The member must, for some reason, assume something, and I am curious to know what it is.
Is it the fact that a situation like this is very complex, as the minister said earlier? What leads someone in the Prime Minister's position to make the decision that he made? Could the member try to comment on that, as he did on everything else leading up to it?