Thank you for your congratulations, and for your question.
The short answer to that question is no. Monetary policy independence is enshrined. It has been since central banks were first created; that's why they were created. The bank's operational independence for monetary policy is legally enshrined in the Bank of Canada Act, well established in practice.
On the administrative side of the bank, it's not that different. Of course, we have lots of legislative measures that already apply to us, the Canada Labour Code, the Human Rights Act, etc. I think we're generally seen as team players. That is, we consider ourselves part of the family of the public service and our budgets tend to be well-aligned with federal government guidance, etc., and our compensation arrangements are also in line. So I see quite a clean separation between, if you like, administrative independence versus monetary policy independence.