I would point out that there are no immediate consequences. There could very well be consequences of another nature, basically. That's why, for the reports, we investigate; we come to a conclusion; we send the report to the Prime Minister, and we publish immediately after, so that the public can see the report for themselves—what the findings were, what happened, and so on and so forth. Then another process can take place, and it does—in the House of Commons or in the media, and so on and so forth. It's out of our court. The minute the commissioner tables a report, it's over.
The commissioner, for what it's worth, has come to a conclusion, as he is required to do under the act. Then, it's up to other people to pick it up from there.