Madam Speaker, as I mentioned at the end of my speech, I have a teenage daughter. I have nieces. I have family members. I expect that my daughter will always have the full access to the health care she requires; we come from an awful lot of privilege. My challenge is thinking about reproductive health care, thinking about health care for women, gender-diverse people, racialized people, people of lower socio-economic levels and people living in other countries who do not have the same rights as my child; that is where I become so upset.
As global citizens, we have to do everything so that the people in the world who need to access health care have the ability to do that. Members should make no mistake: This is health care we are talking about. We have every obligation to fight for them as much as we would fight for ourselves, for our daughters and for our family members.