The 90% reimbursement is a very substantial one as compared with some of the other reimbursements. You mentioned the 60% that's in the act. I don't think it will initially be transformative. There are a lot of inequalities in society, and one provision in the Elections Act can't change that, but it certainly provides a really positive incentive to have more women running and to try to decrease any barriers for those with accessibility challenges.
To the extent that the Elections Act can deal with those problems, a 90% reimbursement strikes me as a very practical solution that I think will actually provide really positive incentives on the ground for candidates to run. There are broader factors, as the political science literature tells us, around why people may be reluctant to run that obviously this doesn't and maybe can't address, but I do think it's really positive. I hope it will have a really strong impact on candidates running in the next election.