Mr. Speaker, I congratulate my colleague on his re-election.
We need legislation to protect supply management because the Canadian government does not decide what is on the table during a negotiation. Each party decides what it is putting on the table. The Americans have announced that supply management will be on the table.
I listened to my colleague from Compton—Stanstead, and the rhetoric has changed. At first, the Liberals were saying what would not be on the table. Now, my colleague is saying that they are going to hold the line when it is on the table. The last time they told us they would hold the line, they folded. Ultimately, they sold off a share of the market.
I know that this is important to her. I know that it is important to her predecessor. However, the Liberals are telling us here today, through the member for Compton—Stanstead, that they will not be supporting our bill. That is what we are hearing.
Will my Conservative colleague commit to supporting a bill to fully protect supply management in order to tie our negotiators' hands when they are told to fold?