You can file a complaint with the commissioner, and the commissioner will cause an investigation. We will interact with the Privy Council Office, which is responsible for managing cabinet confidences. Through the investigation, ultimately, if they maintain their position that it is a cabinet confidence, they will issue a certificate saying so.
I do not get to see the documents. I have no idea whether that certificate is bound and is founded, in terms of a cabinet secrecy. In many other jurisdictions in the provinces and internationally, in, for instance, the U.K. and New Zealand, the commissioner's role, as a third-party review, is reinforced in the legislation. Right now you have to take the clerk's word for it. I'm sure the clerk is very thorough in his evaluations--I'm not challenging that--but there's no third-party review.