Mr. Williams, do you have the power to conduct what some might call a value-for-money audit? Let's say, theoretically, there were a change in government in New Zealand, and an incoming government began asserting that the previous government's expenditures in the environmental field did not, for example, meet their so-called value-for-money tests. Are you in a position to speak freely and publicly about that?
For example, are you able to say, if there were such a change in government in New Zealand, “Hold on a second here. In fact I have the real numbers. I have evidence-based analyses here that tell us whether it did or did not meet value-for-money propositions.”