Yes, be careful with that body language.
Existing CPP legislation already has a legal requirement for the chief actuary to prepare a report on the financial state of the Canada pension plan, so these amendments are again duplicative. They are not necessary, because it is already a statutory requirement for the chief actuary to do this.
The last report, the 33rd actuarial report on the Canada pension plan, was tabled in Parliament on June 8, 2026. I don't know what today is, but I think it's June 8 so the report was actually tabled as of today.
The point here is that the next actuarial report will be, I believe, in three years. It reports on the state of the plan every three years, so it will be tabled in the fall of 2028.
I will just note that the reduction in CPP contributions was the result of an actuarial report that showed that some Canadians—well, all Canadians who contribute—were slightly overcontributing, that the health of the plan was in good shape and that we could reduce the contributions by a small amount. This is exactly what the government has done. It affects employers and the members of the plan equally, because they make equal contributions.
This is good news for Canadian workers and is something that Conservatives have pointed to in the past, so I would think that we're already there in terms of reporting requirements. Given the rationale that I've provided here, I would humbly ask the Conservatives to withdraw this amendment, because it just doesn't make sense to require something that's already legally required.