There was one key position that certainly raised alarm bells for us. That was when they were trying to establish this public appointments commission and selected not a neutral person but Gwyn Morgan, whom everybody saw as somebody who was quite radical in his views. There certainly was a fear when that appointment was going to be made. I think when you're trying to establish an oversight institution like that, one that is in fact above being partisan and has incredibly far-reaching implications to all the agencies and boards and commissions of the government operation, you want to choose an individual who is above partisan politics, somebody who is going to be respected by everybody when that name is put forward.
In reality, that was not the case, and that was the reason I think it was rejected by a large percentage; it was because the individual already had some very specific views on certain minority groups and ethnic groups within the country. That was not acceptable to a large number of us.