Thank you.
Thank you, again, Mr. Kingsley, for being here.
I want to go back to Bill C-21 and get your observations on some of its elements.
One of the ongoing problems we have is that we've seen, for example, from the 2006 Liberal leadership campaign, that there are still outstanding loans from some of their leadership contestants. I think they total over $400,000. I think elements of Bill C-21 would go a long way toward preventing that type of situation from happening again, specifically since, as you've mentioned, loans could only be granted through financial institutions.
The problem we see now with the unpaid loans is that they will probably end up being deemed contributions, since it's been six years in the case of some of those contestants. If a party were to backstop a financial institution's loan through a legal contract between the two, it would be difficult for a party or an EDA to renege on repayment because there would be consequences, but in the existing regime, since Bill C-21 hasn't been passed into law yet, there's still that loophole.
Do you see in Bill C-21 enough preventative measures to stop the type of situation we saw in 2006? You're going further. You're making the suggestion that the party be the guarantor, in effect, and that's not contained in Bill C-21. In your read of Bill C-21, does it have enough provisions in it to prevent the type of situation we saw in 2006 from occurring again?