I don't have a figure. I've gone through the statistics, and they vary for just the province of Ontario. I have no idea what the typical loan would be for a Bloc Québécois candidate, because you have not yet started running them in Ontario.
What you will find I think is that among the Liberal Party and the Conservative Party it's pretty consistent. It seems to be that about 28% or 30% had loans of one type or another, and they ranged widely. Some had very significant loans; some had very modest ones. Some had them from financial institutions; a lot of them had them just from themselves or family members in significant amounts. The NDP seems to have shied away from loans. There seem to be very few loans on the NDP side, at least in Ontario.
So I couldn't give you an exact statistic. I could tell you, though, that about 30% of Conservatives and Liberals take loans of some type, in Ontario, at least. I should say, though, that most of those were probably in total under $10,000.
I might comment on one other thing, while I have the opportunity, concerning bank loans.
Provincially, banks provide loans based on the rebate that the candidate gets after the campaign. That determines the level of the loan, it is the guarantee.
That means it should be fairly easy for any candidate, assuming you're in the range where you have confidence you'll get 10% of the vote, to get a loan from a bank at least equal to the amount you will get in your rebate after the campaign, in terms of your spending. At the provincial level, where this is the case, they tend to use as the guarantee the candidate's guaranteeing of the loan by writing their promise of the rebate they get from Elections Canada. That way, the banks have found a pretty good practice to approach this.