The CDS is our best attempt to do that at the moment.
The way I would explain it is like Lego. If you're trying to build something out of Lego, you have component pieces that you can put together to build a house fairly quickly. Our government already has applications like GC Notify, which is a tool that will send out notifications very simply. In fact, at FWD50 this year, they built a notification system in an hour.
We have another one for forms. If you have a form you want to fill out, you use the form tool that we've built. It's automatically accessible, translated and easy to use. It complies with all laws. We have another one for sending out, for example, translation and so on. You build these building blocks, and once you have that foundation, you can very quickly create new pieces of technology on top of it.
For example, we had a speaker from Ukraine. She's the Ukrainian liaison to the European Union for their digital government. Ukraine has leapt forward in the digital government rankings, despite the fact that they're at war. They have a technology that allows every citizen to be identified by looking at their phone. We don't have a unified digital identity. As you can imagine, being able to log into a system is the first requirement for being able to use it properly. However, in Ukraine, that same tool was quickly repurposed to report war crimes or to report attacks.
Once you have these building blocks, you can build new things on top of them, but we are not investing in consistent, reusable building blocks. The Westminster model encourages each department to build its own things in its little fiefdom, rather than defining what is a common feature, like a notification or a form, and saying, “This is what we're going to use, and everyone is going to use it”, making it awesome and then letting people quickly build things on top of it as experiments, and when those experiments don't work, taking them back, rather than facing criticism.
Taiwan has a parallel digital government portal. On every page that you go to on Taiwan's website, you can replace “GOV” with “G0V” and see their beta of the current website. You can go and try it, and if it works, they'll make it mainstream. That's a very big difference from our approach.