Yes, I certainly believe that, from a worker's perspective, which is really the only perspective that we can bring, harmonization is a great idea. Their jobs are so much more complicated because of the need to deal in two different tax regimes. It limits the ability to be able to collect taxes as effectively as possible. It makes everybody's job more difficult.
I certainly believe that harmonization should be on the table, but it's not. This is a bill that simply has Quebec take over the administration of federal taxes, which is the reverse of the scenario for all other provinces in Canada. It's going to have a negative impact on federal jobs. It's going to have, potentially, a negative impact on those smaller communities where those federal jobs are located. We don't actually think that it's going to simplify anything for anybody because the problem at the root is that you have two very different income tax acts. They are very different and complex, as I said—acts that are, like, four inches thick. Those will need to be harmonized before you can get to anything like a single form.
There are solutions, I believe, to make taxes simpler for Quebeckers. I am a Quebecker. [Technical difficulty—Editor] are looked at. I don't want to sound like a broken record, but automatization is the way to simplify taxes for Canadians.