Sure. I can understand, especially with that court decision in the interim, that it changes the negotiating playing field, as it were.
Mr. Cossette, I think you rightly pointed this out when you spoke about the public's expectations regarding transparency and why you want to engage in a general review of the disclosure policy. When you take a step back, from the public's points of view, it strikes me that the public ought to have a right to know if their financial institutions have been penalized for non-compliance.
There are worries with respect to the application of discretion. My colleagues, Mr. Ehsassi and Mr. Blaikie, have indicated that there may be, by virtue of the ability to pay for high-powered lawyers, a disparity in the application of this discretion as it relates to small players and big players. Mr. James Cohen, from Transparency International Canada, says we should remove that discretion and clearly lay out the criteria for naming financial institutions so that it is publicly available.
Do you think that would be a fair way of approaching it, given your history of the exercise of this discretion and the policy since 2013?