The gifts rule clarifies the dollar amount, but, again, the Ethics Commissioner and Commissioner of Lobbying already set that out, so it doesn't have to be set out in the code. It was already set out in guidelines and statements by both commissioners.
Otherwise, it's a gutting of the rules. As I mentioned, it will be legal for lobbyists to raise tens of thousands of dollars for a minister they're lobbying. Currently, that's illegal. That's a gutting of the rules—going from a four-year cooling-off period to zero for that kind of activity.
The one-year cooling-off period in this code does not apply to anything the Canadian Labour Congress representatives talked about wanting to do. You would have to do all of those things—canvassing, door knocking, and dropping off leaflets and pamphlets—nearly full time or with frequent and extensive interaction with the candidate or party official, in order for you to have to sit out one year. If you do it less than nearly full time and without that interaction, you can lobby them the next minute after you finish door knocking. There's nothing you're going to be prohibited from doing with this rule.
I'm not sure why they have a problem with rule 6 and the definition for “other political work”. It doesn't prohibit them from doing anything they've talked about today—