An auditor general's office—and there's one in almost every country—tends to stick around through feast or famine. It's an important accountability function that governments around the world have implemented.
I don't have a concern that our office would be hamstrung in the future from highlighting problems in the performance of government, whether it's on the financial side or in our performance audit work. We're here without fear or favour to provide the evidence that we found and to provide recommendations for improvement. Sometimes the truth can hurt politically, but our role is to provide that information to you as parliamentarians so you can hold government to account.
I'm fearful about the potential for catastrophic climate change and biodiversity loss, but I'm not going to be commenting on any fear. I haven't really turned my mind to any fear about my position or whatever. To be honest, the scale of the problem globally and nationally is what I'm worried about, not my own role.