Okay. I certainly will.
Basically, on prorogation and where we stand on prorogation, we thought we were making progress in terms of the Parliament of Canada. We brought forward our ask in terms of amending bankruptcy laws to help protect pensioners. We thought we were making progress with NDP bills tabled in the House of Commons, and also Liberal bills tabled in the Senate. Momentum was being gained, and all of a sudden we found out, in this slow-motion train wreck, that the House was prorogued, and prorogued for a period of six weeks, I believe it was. The way we felt as Nortel pensioners was that it wasn't so much the government's right to prorogue; it was the duration.
So we're on a track--hopefully--to have amending legislation for the Nortel pensioners. We see the switchman at the end of the track, and they have the ability to pull the switch and save us. And then somebody decides, “Oh, it's time to go on coffee break. We want to recalibrate what's happening with the switch.”
That's what the galling piece was in terms of--