I understand that, but my invitation to the governor was to get him to reflect on what's missing. There is no cooling off period provided for in the statute so far. The code of ethics that he refers to applies while Mr. Hodgson is there. The blind trust rules that he's referring to apply while Mr. Hodgson is there. He is free, because the governor said so in so many words: he doesn't even know where he's going after.
I say that in terms of the confidence of the Canadian public, we should all be working together to give you the same types of rules that we've given ourselves, because the perception of the public with regard to those conflicts is at least as important, if not more important in the case of the Bank of Canada—a key institution for the whole of our economy—than it could be with regard to any individual minister or their staff. If that carence is there, if that lack is demonstrated, we should all be working on it together to fix it.