Sure.
When this committee looks at the Conflict of Interest Act, which I imagine will be on your agenda soon, because the five-year review deadline is coming up, you will have this issue. You will be looking at this rule that says that former public office holders covered by that act are never allowed to give advice to any client, ever, using information they learned on the job that is not accessible to the public.
That's the question to ask about what people like Stockwell Day are doing. Are they giving advice without using any of the information they learned while cabinet ministers that is not accessible to the public? What is being done to enforce that rule? The Ethics Commissioner is not doing any audits. And former public office holders don't even have to inform her when they leave office. She doesn't even know where they've gone and what they're doing, in many cases.
It's actually a Conflict of Interest Act rule. That's why I urge you to make changes not just to the Lobbying Act. Make relevant and related changes to the other laws. These two laws very much work together, and there are some conflicts between them now and lots of questions about enforcement, on both sides.