I would say that certainly the link between industry and the chair has externally raised eyebrows really from the beginning of the appointment, and it has continued to do so.
I don't know that there's ever going to be perfection, and nobody's perfect, of course, but a starting point of both a clear mandate.... The chair seemed to recoil at the notion that there was a mandate as an independent regulator. However, it does seem to me fairly clear that you can establish a chair and that it is the government in its role of providing the oversight, which the chair acknowledged exists, that both can set a clear mandate in where some of those priorities lie and can certainly do so in terms of ensuring that the CRTC is mandating that it act first and foremost in the public interest by prioritizing some of the consumer- and competition-related concerns.
Part of it is who you appoint. I think it matters. There are very strong staff at the CRTC, without a doubt, but at the end of the day, there is leadership at the top, and that makes a difference. I also think there is the role the government and cabinet plays in all of this. If the CRTC kicks this a little bit back to the government to say, “Well, listen, it's the one providing oversight”—and I thought I heard Scott sort of say that that's real oversight, that you shouldn't be dismissive of that—well, we need the government to engage in that, and we need a far more aggressive, particularly at this moment, hands-on approach from the government.
We've had the minister while in Japan say that this is a problem and that he's going to get involved, but you can't sort of just wash your hands of it and say, “Here are the three things. I'll see you in a couple of months, and we can figure out if there's anything more to do.” There are systemic issues that exist here, and if the CRTC isn't going to fix them, it's up to the government to ensure that it does.