I have a lot of respect for Mr. Ayoub, and I appreciate the non-partisan way in which we mostly interact.
I disagree that the fact that Christopher Wylie used Facebook is an imaginary issue. Whether you call it a hack or improper use of analytics to mess with the U.S. election, the fact that he's involved with the current government and has worked with the party in the past is not imaginary. It's a real issue, and it's a real scandal.
Government advertising continues with Facebook, Twitter, and Google. These are not imaginary issues. We brought the issues up in the past when we did the study, and the bureaucrats mentioned that yes, they had analytics, and they shared them with internal people within the party-exempt staff.
It's not an imaginary issue that the Russians are using social media and Facebook and probably using the same analytics from people from government or people who are clicking on government sites. It's not imaginary. It's a real issue, and it affects government advertising.
I'm not asking about the wider issues of electoral reform or this and that, but specifically about government advertising. I don't think it will be reflected in another study. We've asked for this before, and I think it's very important that we have her come and address the issue of Facebook and government advertising, which is the purview of this committee and is linked to the actual study that we did previously in this committee.
We brought up the issue of privacy and who has access to this, months before this whole Christopher Wylie scandal blew up. I think it's very relevant. With all due respect—because I do have a lot of respect for you—it's not an imaginary issue. It's a real issue. I'm happy to—