Mr. Chair, you won't be surprised that I say it's a little bit of apples and oranges when we're making that comparison. I will say a couple of things.
We have very close relationships with our colleagues in the United States. I think there's a mutual respect of the acts in both. Both are very strong acts that are serving the interests of individual countries but also collectively, because we have lots of ties across the two.
I will say from this standpoint that we've adopted elements in here that we've looked at in other countries and have brought into ours. If you look at the U.K.'s recent reforms or Australia's recent reforms, you'll see that they've similarly taken elements of ours and embedded them within theirs. It's a fairly connected community of people with a very similar piece.
James, you work quite closely...and you were down in Washington recently, so maybe you want to talk a little bit about that.