That's a good question. About whether or not there's an effort to obscure the changes, I think it's a question you should pose to Mr. Kessel. All I can say is that they exist, that they do have an impact on the lives of women and girls, and that impact is real and meaningful.
I noted, for example, that the other person who testified about the capacity of the folks giving advice--Mrs. Bejzyk--referred to the folks in human rights policy, and those are precisely the people who no longer have a specific mandate to do gender-based analysis.