The concern we have with the 20% rule is how you define the 20% rule. In some cases it's 15% versus 20%, or is it 25%? It gets into that area where there's a lot of potential for miscommunication or misunderstanding of those rules, which could cause lobbyists to be, in part, in an infraction against some of the lobbying rules, which gets them into trouble.
Our view is that if you're a lobbyist you're a lobbyist. So if you're lobbying government, no matter what role you're playing and what issue you're doing, notwithstanding the five-year rule, which we're saying to reduce to one, it should be registrable. That way it gets away from any potential issues or conflicts that might come up that might cause a lobbyist to be in trouble. That's what our general sense is, what our members are telling us.
I don't know, Stephen, if you've specifically talked about it with our members.
I think a lot of that comes down to the clarification that if you're a lawyer working for a law firm and you're lobbying a firm, you are a lobbyist. If you're in communication with some government official on behalf of a client, you should be able to register if that's a registerable activity.