Mr. Cullen, when I referred to “policy chaos”, I was not saying that the policies of this government, or indeed certain elements of the policies that have been put forward by opposition parties or by provinces, were chaotic. What I was saying—and this is a very important distinction—is that no matter how good or constructive many of these policies are, if they're all going in different directions, you have policy chaos.
I visited the Commonwealth of Australia about four months ago and discovered that the states of Australia and the Commonwealth Government of Australia were all going in the same direction. It is a federation, just as we are; why we can't we do it? The Federal Republic of Germany has Länder and a central government all going in the same direction.
When I talk about chaos, it's not referring to any particular party policy or government policy as chaotic; it is saying we should have convergence, please, and I see very little indication, based on the last meeting of the Council of the Federation and the first meeting of the Council of the Federation, of that being the direction we're going. There's a price to pay for all that and all the uncertainty that goes with it.