That's a good question, Mr. Lake.
You'll realize that I was also parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, with the responsibility for Canadians abroad.
There have been a number of recommendations made over the years, most of them dealing with changes to the Competition Act. As I've indicated before, there has been a series of bills extending from the changes: on the dual track on price-fixing, on collusion and conspiracy, on changing the criminal provisions on predatory pricing, and on strategies of below-cost selling. Some of those have been implemented, ultimately, and in time, by your government, so I take some credit for the fact that did take place.
At the same time, you also have to recognize, Mr. Lake, that over the years there has been a phalanx of those who, because it's a law of general application, certainly didn't want to see a law designed for one industry applied to others. So for obvious reasons, in my time as a member of Parliament I have probably enriched more lobbyists in this country than has perhaps any member in history. But that being the case, the recognition is that the changes you ultimately made in 2009 were predicated very much on my initiatives—