Perhaps I could answer that, because it is interesting.
When I did see the President of the Treasury Board, at that point I took a copy of the open government act and said to him, “Minister, if you take this act and include it in your Federal Accountability Act, all your problems are solved on that, because that solves it all.” When I made the statement about the radical reform, I was referring to the fact that the government, in its platform, had suggested giving the Information Commissioner order powers, something that I had not asked for and that, as the chairman understands, I have argued against very often in the committee. I thought that was the radical departure.
I assumed, based on what I had heard, that the Access to Information Act provisions that I had given the minister were going to show up in the Federal Accountability Act. They did not.