I should clarify one point.
There has been research into the instance that was mentioned and the allegation about Russian bots supporting the Conservative Party after a specific rally. In fact, that has been proven to be untrue. Those bots, according to researchers at McGill University, were experimental; a student was just playing around with bots and happened to latch on to that specific case. Any sort of blame that has been laid or any allegations regarding the Conservative Party, or even Russians, in that case should be discounted. That did not happen.
Of course, I think all parliamentarians have a moral obligation to reject any sort of disinformation and misinformation and to not engage in the use of it. More needs to be done in terms of educating parliamentarians. I strongly support annual training for all parliamentarians and their staff on misinformation, disinformation and influence operations to know what they look like so that they're able to detect them when they see them and run across these sorts of narratives. That's very important.
I've long advocated the creation of a committee inside Parliament where representatives of each of the major political parties would be in attendance. They would get briefed on a weekly or biweekly basis on emerging narratives so that everyone was on the same page and to avoid anyone mistakenly or inadvertently amplifying some of these narratives.
Those are a couple of fairly simple steps that we can take to help parliamentarians. I do believe that most parliamentarians—I would say all parliamentarians—want to do the right thing and fulfill that moral obligation in not amplifying these sorts of narratives.