Sure.
Parliament's in violation of the Lobbying Act by failing to refer to this committee or another committee the review of the Lobbying Act for the last 10 years. It's supposed to be done twice. It should be reviewed, and one of the things that should be put in is that the Commissioner of Lobbying is required to issue a public summary of every single review or investigation of any situation or complaint that comes before her. If she finds the person not guilty, the person wouldn't have to be identified, but at least we would know whether she's doing the job at all, and it would summarize when the situation arose, when the complaint was received, when the investigation started, when it concluded, what the conclusion was and what the commissioner did.
Then we would know, like we did with Karen Shepherd, the former commissioner. She found more than 100 lobbyists guilty of violating the Lobbyists' Code, and she let them all off in secret without identifying any of them and issuing a report to Parliament, so we still don't know who they are, those 100 lobbyists who are likely out there still lobbying unethically.