I understand the question. I still have some disagreement with the premise, as I outlined in my previous response. However, one of the things you will have noticed.... And I'd like to thank members of all parties for their thoughtful contributions to the policy development process, because it has allowed us to pick up where these trip lines may exist through the policy development process and cure them as we go, to the extent that, at some point in the near future, we find ourselves with the public health emergency partially behind us and Canadians en masse changing their behaviour towards how they go to work and what motivates them to do so. We're going to have to continue to refine the policies we have in place now to meet the needs of not only Canadian households but the broader economy as well.
To your question, yes, there will continue to be opportunities for input and a willingness on the government's part to be flexible where we need to adjust policy. That said, to date the policies we have rolled out have largely been successful. They are more ambitious than those of most other countries in the world and have delivered benefits in a timely way. We've been able to do this because we were so open to feedback from different perspectives. It allowed us to spot these so-called trip lines and remove them, for the most part, before they caused trouble for wide swaths of the Canadian population.