Naturally, the risks are with regard to the fact that we used to be in a closed system where one would issue a licence and one would—as I would say, being a regulator—achieve regulatory rent from that and then contribute back to the system. Most of our system is built on that closed environment. That is no longer the case that we have in front of us, so the risks there are, clearly, that the support mechanisms for Canadian content will be diminished over time and have been diminished here. This will result in fewer types of programming and will certainly make it much more difficult to support niche programming or programming that is meant to support the multicultural nature of this country, or to develop indigenous programming or OLMC programming. Those are certainly not policy objectives that.... Those are certainly under threat, and without some form of support, they will not be produced.
On May 2nd, 2019. See this statement in context.