Mr. Speaker, it is the government, not the official opposition, that sets the agenda of the House. The government can put an opposition day on the agenda and allow a debate on the question. That is the reality.
Another thing that needs to be made clear is that, for five weeks, the Bloc Québécois believed in the Liberal government, believed in the Prime Minister. It placed its trust in this government twice during votes in the House. After nine years of Liberal governance, how could the Bloc place so much trust in this government? I say this with all due respect. It was naive and not very clever, because it did not lead to anything. Absolutely nothing was gained.
Of course, we are happy to see that the Bloc Québécois is now going to do its job as an opposition party, but again, we have to ask: Will the NDP stand by its decision to tear up the agreement in August?