Mr. Speaker, this is commentary on what I just heard from the member for Kingston and the Islands.
Members in the House come from different parts of the country. Many members have constituencies that are very large with lots of varying issues that people really care about. This Parliament would not be paralyzed if the government would just hand over the documents in their unredacted form. Because there is no Private Members' Business or private members' motions, the only other way to raise issues, apart from Standing Order 31, is to use concurrence reports in order to be able to talk about them.
In my family, I do not know of any cases of breast cancer, but my paternal grandfather passed away due to brain cancer here in Canada. That is the reason my family came here from Communist Poland, thanks to a medical exit visa my father was able to get. Cancer touches a lot of Canadians. I think it is disingenuous to accuse us of not having the right motivations. The member heard from two others in the Conservative caucus who gave impassioned pleas for what should be done. This is an opportunity to speak about cancer. I think one in two Canadians, at some point in their lives, will face that diagnosis.