I appreciate that. Thank you, Mr. Johnston.
Finally, through the chair to you, Mr. Johnston, I want to point out something particularly concerning: a different conclusion that you arrived at in comparison to Mr. O'Toole. I want to highlight that Mr. O'Toole raised a question of privilege, and I just want to quote a portion of what he said:
The briefing from CSIS confirmed to me what I had suspected for quite some time, which is that my parliamentary caucus and I were the target of a sophisticated misinformation and voter suppression campaign orchestrated by the People's Republic of China before and during the 2021 general election.
So, members of the Conservative caucus and he, himself, were targeted.
In your report, you find, in reference to Mr. Chiu—who was of course a member of the Conservative Party and a candidate in the 2021 election—that misinformation could not be traced to a state-sponsored source. We have two very different conclusions: one is from the CSIS briefing that Mr. O'Toole is referring to, and then you're stating in your report that there was no clear evidence that it was state-sponsored. How could you have such different conclusions from what Mr. O'Toole received?