Well, if you've had private conversations with folks who believe I should be running sooner rather than later in the general election, and that as a result thereof, procurement will be the better, allow me to doubt that.
I can tell you what some have told me privately, though. Over the past five or six years, as a result of, among other things, the ad scam, they've indeed seen this department being immobilized, with ministers who would do nothing except play rope-a-dope. The previous minister, frankly, was the best example of that, spending all of his time answering questions on Gomery in the House of Commons and doing nothing to move the ball with these people.
When I became minister, I found a set of people in the upper echelon hoping that for at least the next several years ahead they would have somebody who would actually be implementing things, rather than playing defence.
I'm happy to answer...I will run in the next general election; I made that clear. Once I've said that, I'm happy to answer questions about procurement. I understand you probably don't know much about it because you really haven't spent the time, unlike others among your colleagues, who have received briefings. You believed that not to be necessary, so I guess for you, discussing whether I will run in this riding or that is more interesting.