You're not familiar with it. Needless to say, it provided that candidates who are the target of disinformation ought to be informed, barring national security considerations. Now, my former colleague, Kenny Chiu, was drowning in a sea of disinformation in Steveston—Richmond East, and he wasn't alone in that regard. Several other Conservative candidates were, including former member of Parliament Alice Wong. Mr. Chiu was kept in the dark in the face of disinformation, but Madam Justice Hogue concluded that there was a reasonable possibility that those narratives from the Beijing regime impacted the result in that riding.
You spoke about the PRC and the connections between the PRC and certain media within Canada. I would note in that regard that at page 17 of the NSICOP report, the NSICOP noted that “Most of these media outlets” in the greater Vancouver area “were linked to the PRC via partnership agreements with the China News Service, the Chinese Communist Party's primary media entity”. Here not only do you have foreign disinformation from Beijing amplified on social media platforms, including WeChat, but you also actually have Canadian-owned news outlets that are amplifying that disinformation.
Can you speak to that, to some of the methods that the Chinese regime is using and to how that can be countered? It certainly was something that may have impacted the result in more than one riding.