A line will have to be drawn. MPs are public employees, but the sense of your boss knowing what you do on the job as an employee is different from the public at large knowing what's going on involving privacy issues and personal information of staff and things like that. The public doesn't have a right to know all of those situations.
The other area in which there will have to be a line is that every MP is also a member of a party and takes part in party activities, right up to the Prime Minister, and what they do for the party is something that I think can be hidden from the public, as long as it's not done with public money.
The biggest concern is MPs' offices being involved in wrongdoing, in terms of an employee position and the use of the public's money, or using the public's money for party activities.
Lines will just have to be drawn. They'll have to be drawn carefully in the legislation, and then the legislation.... No matter what, any law is vague words on paper, and the Information Commissioner will make orders, some of those will be appealed, and eventually after eight or 10 years we'll know exactly what those words mean in terms of where the lines are.
Those are the general areas in which the lines will have to be drawn.