Well, actually, I think we can point to a very real situation that is not hypothetical, in that we looked at allied countries and like-minded countries around the world to see what mechanisms they had and have in place.
What stuck out for me was the French example of the Conseil d'État, which weighed in when there was a leak from the Macron campaign to basically say that it was a threat against their democracy, and they advised the media not to report on it.
That's a step further than what this is anticipating. We tried to come up with something that would fit within the Canadian context. The Conseil d'État in France has been around for a very long time. The idea was to avoid the kind of bureaucratic gridlock that we saw, for example, in the United States in the 2016 presidential election, and to avoid having one individual law enforcement agency going out and saying something, and to try to create a process, and to announce that well in advance so that Canadians could understand the process that would lead to such an announcement, should it occur. The hope, of course, is that it won't occur and we won't need to use it, but it's always better to prepare and plan for the worst.