Mr. Virani, I don't believe for a second that the broader interpretation even existed when the Emergencies Act was invoked, at the time of the invocation, for a number of reasons. It wasn't really until weeks before the Rouleau commission was about to begin that we all of a sudden heard about this broader interpretation that had somehow magically appeared. It's really quite disturbing that this broader interpretation is there, and no one has seen it or heard it, apparently. Mosley didn't get an opportunity to have it at his disposal, and neither did Justice Rouleau, who indicated that the evidence he found to support the government's invocation was weak at best and that anybody else could have come to a completely different conclusion. He was disappointed that the government withheld that.
One of the questions I have had for a long time is, who is actually the client? You're hiding behind solicitor-client privilege. Why is it so difficult to...? Is it the Government of Canada? Is it the Governor in Council? Is it the Prime Minister? Is it the Attorney General? In your opinion, who is the actual client in the solicitor-client privilege in this particular case?