All right. That's what I wanted clarification on.
Ms. Ablett, as a mother and a grandmother, I have to say I have some real questions about this universal child care system that you talked about. I have seen a lot of different permutations and combinations, my own and many others.
I read something very interesting on Monday in the Globe and Mail, which was that the Swedish trade minister—I don't know if you saw this—two weeks ago had to resign because it was found that she had an undeclared nanny. The story gets more interesting because just last week the Swedish culture minister resigned also because she had an undeclared nanny. Then it came out in the same article that the Norwegian Prime Minister has recently disclosed that he didn't pay the necessary taxes on child care arrangements that he made fifteen years ago. It struck me that here are countries with fully developed, universal, state-run child care systems, which are supposed to be the benchmark for the whole world, and yet you have their leaders choosing alternative kinds of child care. It just seems to me that there is more and more evidence that you can't have a one-size-fits-all system, because it doesn't work.
What do you make of these kinds of examples?