Thank you very much for both of your questions.
To clarify the first question, which was about the financing and the money issue being the only barrier for women in politics, it's one of many barriers.
The academic data—I'll just make reference to Canadian data—specify the nomination and the financial process as the top two barriers for women in politics. I believe there are many issues that need to be addressed, and I don't think there is necessarily one issue that's going to solve this for getting more women in politics. A lot of things have to happen. Improvements have to be made on a lot of different issues to really make the big difference you're looking for.
On the second question that you had, with regard to the provincial numbers of women in politics, yes, we do have those numbers on our website. When we first started Equal Voice we were really looking at the federal numbers. It's really a matter of capacity, and over the last few months we've had people coming to us with the expectation that we are to provide provincially for the data, and now there's the expectation of municipal as well, considering that there have been some changes at the municipal level.
We're going to do and grow as much as we can, but we understand that the Canadian public is starting to look toward Equal Voice as a really good reference point for getting the data on women in politics. The provincial data is there.