The matter that is a public issue right now in Newfoundland was probably the driving force. All this came about at a time when the government was involved in promoting a major Newfoundland government public undertaking in the development of Muskrat Falls, a $7-billion project. A $7-billion obligation on the backs of a mere 525,000 people is a pretty heavy burden to carry, so people were naturally concerned, but government was struggling ahead. That was coupled with the fact that the whole question of the development of Labrador power on the Churchill River is a controversial matter, coupled with the fact that the government was not readily making information available, on the basis that it was confidential. They were negotiating with Nova Scotia and with potential contractors and designers, and they just weren't making information available. The public couldn't get adequate information on what the government was about to undertake with this thing. It was all of those things. When you bring Bill 29 into that political milieu, you can understand that it just created a massive public reaction. Those were the primary factors.
You would know better. You were in the news media at the time.