I suggest the member might look at the changes to the Lobbying Act. The Lobbyists Registration Act was renamed the Lobbying Act. The former registrar, who was an employee of the Department of Industry, was made an officer of Parliament. So having that protection, independence, and autonomy was an important change. The five-year ban on lobbying by former designated public officers was another key reform.
Changes were made to the Canada Elections Act to remove the influence of big money--no more secret trust funds, big money donations, and corporate and union contributions. There were, of course, complementary changes to the Privacy Act and a number of other statutes in that respect. Changes in the act to procurement practices--advertising, polling, contracting--are all worthy of mention.
On the Federal Accountability Act, a lot of hard work was put in by members of all parties in both houses of Parliament, but it stands on the books as the most comprehensive anti-corruption law in the history of Canada.