I see it as more complicated than that. When the political party that you are part of was in government, there was, within that party, pro- and anti-public broadcasting debate and discussion behind closed doors.
The issue of public broadcasting is a difficult issue for the Conservative Party. They know from research, as we do, that the strong majority of people who support them also support public broadcasting. It's an issue that divides their core base of support--divides the 10% from the other 30% that means they're in government. So you tend to get things from the Conservative government--and I think to a degree it's what you got from the Liberal government before it--that come from both sides of its mouth. It's a Hydra-headed kind of creature.
We log comments that Conservative candidates make to our supporters across the country. I have a huge file containing all kinds of comments. I could show you thousands of comments that are very laudatory towards public broadcasting. And then you get some comments.... Mr. Del Mastro and I had a little kerfuffle some months ago about the comment that Mr. Angus mentioned.
So you get all kinds of comments coming out of this government. They have a majority and they want to examine the access to information policies of the CBC. We're not opposed to that. We don't really take Quebecor all that seriously, ourselves.