You're right, and Al Sutherland will correct me if I have the technicalities wrong. We accepted the commission's suggestion after 2019 to establish it on an ongoing basis. In other words, it wasn't for one election. The order in council that recreated the commission was on an ongoing basis—it didn't sunset—and that allowed the commission, as I said in my opening remarks, to have some capacity between elections, which is more complicated in a minority Parliament, of course, to ensure that continuity.
With respect to the legislated independence, I've shared this with Mr. Johnston in my conversations with him previously, and I think I may have said it at the committee, as well. Ideally, we would have a legislated structure that would create this. We're in a minority Parliament, where House time is precious, where changes like this to the Canada Elections Act or other companion legislation are, obviously, extremely important and sensitive. We didn't want to have a gap around a potential ultimate legislative structure, but we think we can learn from the current structure, which exists by virtue of an order in council and exists on an ongoing basis. However, we're obviously looking at the recommendations coming out of the 2021 report and would want the new commissioner to quickly be seized of those as well.