It would be a mix.
In regard to some of the comments earlier about the lines being a little bit fudged, and the government is in the business of putting in a good election process, I agree with that, but I think it is very much our job and it is expected of us to get the word out. I'm a new Canadian. I got to vote only a few years ago. It was a great thrill for me to be able to do that here in Canada. It's confusing, you have three levels of government. The questions I get asked are very simple. What's this one about? This is the big one, this is the government. Oh, this is Canada. So we have to talk to people in many different ways. We may talk to community leaders who will ask questions. They will then go talk to their own community members.
Language can be a significant barrier. It should not necessarily mean that somebody who is a Canadian citizen should therefore not have the right to vote. If they have the opportunity to have explanations, if they take counsel from people around them who they trust--not necessarily us, it may be third party information after us--if we are posting information and we are trying to be able to make it so people can get there to vote, then I think that you're going to get a much better system instead of getting government by default because you have certain sectors and certain populations that simply can't make that process work for them.