I would go back to the fact that we do have a process in place. The heart of the process is that there is a committee—with the clerk; the national security adviser; and DMs of Justice, Public Safety, and Global Affairs—that would meet if there are any cyber-interference or threats to the election. They would deem whether it was appropriate in certain cases—and they would be rare cases—to actually go to the public and say that we have a credible threat, and there would be information. They would of course brief Elections Canada, and they would brief the political parties as well.
On May 27th, 2019. See this statement in context.