I'll start with your first question.
No rule has been replaced. The Lobbyists' Code of Conduct exists and I cannot change it without holding consultations and providing you with a summary afterwards. Therefore, rule 6 still exists, as do rules 7 to 10, but these rules are accompanied by guidelines to facilitate their interpretation. I updated these guidelines because I was new to the job—I had just come to this position—and also because there was going to be an election. There is a rule on political activities, and I wanted to make sure that it was well-understood by lobbyists.
The rules haven't changed. I have simplified and clarified the examples of activities that could lead to a finding of conflict of interest and which require attention. I can tell you that lobbyists have expressed their satisfaction with the updated guidelines. They have been simplified, but directly and separately for each rule.
Your second question dealt with how lobbyists could manage possible conflicts of interest. Rule 6 is general in nature: it asks lobbyists to be careful about all their behaviour and not to act in such a way as to place the individual who listens to them in a conflict of interest situation, that is, a member of Parliament. Rules 7 to 10 are more specific: a lobbyist must not offer gifts; if a lobbyist undertakes political activities to help you get elected, he or she cannot then lobby you; and he or she cannot use interpersonal relationships to his or her advantage. The purpose of these rules is to prevent a conflict of interest or to avoid creating tension, a conflict between a private interest and the public interest.