The industry doesn't have a position on the bill for or against it. We haven't come at it from that angle, and banks operate within the laws of Canada. As Mr. Wrobel noted, banks are federally regulated, so we're used to that sort of oversight.
I think, though, the one concern I would state is that we watched very carefully the discussion around this legislation in the House of Commons and at committee, and the allegations or the charge that perhaps banks would be controlling access to the political process concerns us. The banks will make decisions based on lending decisions. They will look at the financial viability of a campaign, as I've said, and their ability to repay. It's not a question of anything other than that. This is what banks do.
So the idea that banks could be accused of favouring one candidate over another or one party over another is a cause for concern for the industry, but if Parliament sees fit to have political financing conducted in the way that it's proposed in Bill C-21, the banks would absolutely comply with the law.