My understanding, based on news stories, is that there already was an order in council that directed the agencies, or at least CSIS, to pass information to the Minister of Public Safety. You will have to make a judgment, as legislators, on whether that accountability should flow through the Minister of Public Safety or flow through the Prime Minister. In a sense, everything ends up on the Prime Minister's desk. That's a legislative design issue that you can debate when you have a bill in front of you. The NSIA works for the Prime Minister, not for the Minister of Public Safety, and acts as a coordinator for all of those agencies.
Anyway, I don't want to get deep in the weeds of governance, but these are the kinds of things where writing laws and setting up the processes and institutions will affect how people then behave and exercise judgment until you change the legislation again. We've rewritten our national security legislation roughly every five to six years because the world keeps changing. No doubt we'll have to do it again.