I do not have statistics with me. I can certainly try to provide to the committee where we have those statistics available. We don't track the financial activity in terms of defaulted loans. What we do on an ongoing basis is make sure that the information we're getting in those financial returns is current. So we certainly can provide statistics around how many, the size of loans, and how much was outstanding at any point in time, and give you some anecdotal evidence around the default issues. But it would only come to us if it were a compliance issue. If they became non-compliant, if that loan fell to the guarantor, that's really not our business, in terms of—We certainly want to make sure things are followed beyond that.
So it's an interesting question. Our job is to make sure that people are in compliance, and when they get out of compliance, they come back into compliance with the Election Finances Act. The relationship with their financial institution is their business. We just want to make sure there's no contravention of contribution limits, things of that nature. So it would be if it were a default on a loan and it became an ineligible contribution. That's where we would be most concerned.