If I may correct you first, we are talking about 12 or 24 months, not two months.
We considered the following: the current guideline says 5 years or nothing at all. We looked at how things are done elsewhere around the world. What I can say is that it is the people who are lobbied who have to comply with the regulations. If the person has a sense of obligation, it is up to them to decide whether they should meet that person.
For my part, I decided to establish a rule because there was one in 2015, but I could simply have banned lobbying of anyone who has a sense of obligation toward to the lobbyist. We wanted to provide a rule as a guideline.
I looked at all the bans in place.
Under the Conflict of Interest Act, a minister may not engage in certain activities within two years of leaving their post. For other office holders, the ban is for one year.
After you leave your job as MPs, you may not engage in lobbying for five years. That is the ban you are subject to.
I had to compare restricting political activity for a period of time and depending on its importance with the case of persons who, like you, held a position for at least two or more years.
I did not hire a psychologist. The sense of obligation is really what matters. It is based on facts, the role you played and its importance to you. We would certainly interview you if we were to investigate a lobbyist who had contacted you but wasn't supposed to.