There was a lot in there.
On the provision of information to NSICOP and the special rapporteur, the Prime Minister has committed to providing and giving access to as much as possible. He provided unprecedented amounts of information and access to information during the public inquiry in the fall, so if there are concerns on that front, I'm happy to take those back.
In terms of ties to the PMO and so on, there's a lot of assertion and innuendo there that I'd be happy to answer questions on if there are questions on that, because there's not a lot there.
In terms of the broad question of whether it is too vast, well, it's for that exact reason that there are a number of different organizations looking at things. It's why the Prime Minister took the additional step of putting in place an independent special rapporteur to identify exactly what might be getting missed in all of this and what more needed to be done to ensure we are getting as much of the best work possible done in all these different parts and are effectively answering Canadians' questions, most importantly perhaps.