If in reference to myself, because the work falls under the rubric of national security and therefore is classified—for instance, have they put procedures in place dealing with disclosure of information, and has there been adherence by them to those procedures—by definition, since the material is national security, you can't get in the door to look at it. So I would say in that area I've told you I can't give you any assurances. I can't, because I can't get in there unless they decide to open up their doors and waive all the privilege. So the answer is nothing; I can't look at any. Therefore, I need the power, and the power has to be access as of right to all information, and they cannot claim any privilege to stop it, whether it's national security, defence, or foreign affairs. The only thing I think should be...cabinet confidence.
But as long as they can claim a privilege, I cannot tell you I've looked at everything and I cannot tell you they've put those things in place and are respecting things that are in place.