Sure. I was trying to ask questions about PMPRB independence.
As my former colleague Doug Clark just mentioned, under the act we have the capacity to complete guidelines. We have to consult, yes, but we make the final decision. That was one of my jobs as a board member.
If it becomes possible for industry to put pressure through other channels—through Health Canada, through the minister's office—that effectively stops that consultation or asks us to do so, it signals to the world that we may not be able to finish guidelines on our own. Even though we're empowered by law, the politics of the situation complicate it. When it has been communicated that there is this end-around that is now possible, it makes it very hard, not just for guidelines but for any kind of decision-making that we want to do, for us to arrive at final decisions on our own.