As indicated in my presentation, I'm not a scholar, so I won't speculate.
It was 76%; the previous general election was 70.95%; the previous one was 65%; the one before that was, again, 63%; and then before that, in 1991, we had 82% or 83%. The Saskatchewan people do vote, they're interested in showing up and making their mark.
To what would I attribute the growth? As I indicated before, there are two interveners in the rate of turnout: one is the political process and one is the administrative process. As to which is the most responsible for it, I wouldn't speculate, but certainly there was great interest in this particular election in Saskatchewan, and it shows.
We also changed the way we delivered elections in Saskatchewan in that election. For example, for the first time we used radio, as I indicated before. We changed our advertising program, which was mostly legalistic and very repulsive—that is the expression—to something that is more user friendly, and that enticed people to vote. We also, for the very first time in a provincial election, used voter information cards. It had never been done before, but people expect it now; they see it federally, they see it municipally, so they should see it provincially as well. It's a combination of many efforts, and scholars will tell us later on what was the true reason.