Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the Member for the question. And, you know, I too think this is a great group of MLAs. I think we can accomplish a lot together, but we have to keep working together. And, you know, tension happens. Tension happens in any kind of environment like this, and that's why structural changes are important to me. I think it's easy to say we'll just have good relationships and good relationships are the way forward. Of course they are. But what happens when you don't, right? And I think a change like having associate Ministers, which allow the chairs of standing committee to peek in behind the curtain and be part of governance, observe government decision-making, be able to ask informed questions, and then transmit that back to standing committees and Regular Members, will create a more cohesive government structure. So even though the Cabinet will still be a minority for all intents and purposes, there will be that bridge between the two sides. And those divisions are -- exists operationally, and they don't just go away because you have good relations. We work on different sides; we work doing different jobs. This will allow those jobs to come together in a meaningful way.
The other thing I think we need to take advantage of is caucus. I think the caucus is a place where you leave your hat at the door, all Members are equal, and everyone is free to speak on the issues that are important to them and free to speak frankly and candidly with decision-makers. And I think those opportunities are so important to building trust and building results that are going to move the territory forward. So I'd like to use caucus as more than an avenue to do, you know, administrative work for the Legislative Assembly and prepare us for session but also prepare us for political decision-making that needs to happen. And I think a good example of this is the meeting that we had as a caucus with the Indigenous nations and their leadership. We can continue doing that as equals throughout this term and find other ways to do that as well so we're not speaking as two different sides. We're coming together on those important issues and working together. And when -- and building a new structure, an evolution of consensus government that gives the Regular Members a place at the -- on the Cabinet side. Thank you.