Madam Speaker, I often listen to what my colleague has to say. I served with him on the Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying. He seems to be an expert on scenarios that need to be examined carefully. It is okay to be a whistle-blower, but for the benefit of the people in the House, I would ask him to table the documents he mentioned. That would be interesting. I would love to read them.
The fact remains that, during the committee's deliberations, the only doctors who appeared and said that they were trying to change patients' minds were those who oppose MAID. They admitted that they were trying to discourage patients and said they were successfully changing their minds.
I pointed out that that was against the law, against Quebec's medical assistance in dying legislation and the Quebec college of physicians' code of ethics, and that did not bother them. Since this is a provincial responsibility, I would hope that the Government of Ontario has taken legal action against those who committed the acts the member talked about.
Madam Speaker, on a point of order, you have been waving at me for a while now, but I have not seen anyone else rise to speak.