At this stage, the obvious answer is no. Most Canadians haven't thought through the issue. I'm not sure that my answer would be the same if we engaged in a year-long consultation, information, and education process with Canadians.
In terms of that, I think the New Zealand example, where there were two referendums a year apart, is very important. The first one didn't determine the issue but it raised consciousness, and people then said, “Oh, this is something I need to pay attention to.” It was a good education process. I think that by the second referendum New Zealanders did understand what they were voting on. That's evidenced by the fact that two decades later, when they had another referendum, a solid majority reaffirmed their earlier decision after having lived with MMP for a couple of decades.